(Redirected from Al Gordon)There were two
American comic-book artists named 'Al Gordon'. One was primarily active in the
1950s, the other started working in the comics industry in 1978.
Al Gordon (1950s)
The first American comic-book artist named Al Gordon was a
penciler-
inker active in the 1950s when writer-artist credits were not routinely given, making a full bibliography difficult to compile. His earlist known credits are a story each in
Trojan Comics' ''Attack!'' #6 and ''Beware'' #14 (both March 1953).
Other work includes
Lev Gleason Publications' ''
Crime Does Not Pay'' and ''
Daredevil'';
Toby Comics' ''Monty Hall of the
U.S. Marines'', ''
Ramar of the Jungle'' and ''Tales of Horror''; and, for
Marvel Comics' 1950s forerunner,
Atlas Comics, stories in at least one issue each of ''Battle Action'', ''
Two-Gun Kid'', ''Western Outlaws'', ''Wild Western'', and, with his final known credit, ''
Western Kid'' #17 (Aug. 1957).
Al Gordon (modern)
The second American comic-book artist named Al Gordon was born
June 22,
1953, in
San Francisco,
California. He is best known for his 1990s work on
DC Comics'
Legion of Super Heroes and the
Justice League Of America,
Marvel Comics'
Fantastic Four, and Image Comics' creator-owned WildStar.
Biography
Early career
Gordon's career began in the mid-
1970s as as
penciler and
inker of the story "A Christmas Carol", starring
Michael T. Gilbert's
funny-animal detective the
Wraith, in ''
Quack'' #6 (Dec. 1977), from the early
independent comics publisher
Star Reach. The following year, Gordon began freelance inking for
Marvel Comics, working with
pencilers
Bob Budiansky and
Steve Leialoha, respectively, on a backup story each in ''
Captain America'' #220-221 (April-May 1978). He was the regular inker on ''
Spider-Woman'', with penciler
Carmine Infantino on all but one issue from #7-16 (Oct. 1978 - July 1979), and worked as well on at least one issue each of ''
The Avengers'', ''
Ghost Rider'', ''
Iron Man'', ''
Marvel Premiere'', ''
Marvel Team-Up'', ''
Marvel Two-in-One'', ''
Master of Kung Fu'', ''
Power Man and Iron Fist'', ''
The Spectacular Spider-Man'' and ''
Thor Annual'' through 1982.
DC and DNAagents
That year Gordon left Marvel for
DC Comics to ink writer-penciler
Scott Shaw and fill-in penciler
Stan Goldberg on the
funny-animal superhero series ''
Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew''. In 1983, Gordon did a year-and-a-half-long run at the independent
Eclipse Comics, inking
Will Meugniot on Will and Mark Evanier's ''
The DNAgents'', as well as inking Rick Hoberg for the company's series 'Surge'' and its
anthology ''Eclipse Monthly''.
Afterward, he returned to Marvel to become the regular inker on both a run of company's flagship series ''
Fantastic Four'', and on the
science-fiction adventure series ''
Rocket Raccoon'' (with Mike Mignola penciling). Other work around this time includes issues of ''
The Eternals'' and ''
Power Pack'', and Marvel's licensed series ''
Thundercats''.
Freelancing once again for DC, Gordon in 1987 began inking Kevin Maguire while also working with plotter/thumbnail artist
Keith Giffen on two of that era's most critically lauded series, ''
Justice League'' and ''
Justice League International''. Two years later, Gordon, this time inking Giffen, also began cowriting on scripts by Giffen and the writing team of
Tom and
Mary Bierbaum for DC's revived ''
Legion of Super Heroes''. Gordon took over the writing and scripting chores for issues #21 though 24 (Aug. 1991), while continuing to ink Giffen.
Other late 1980s and 1990s work includes DC's ''Valor'' and ''Timber Wolf'' (the latter of which he also wrote and thumbnailed); writer
Alan Moore's ''
Tom Strong'' for DC’s
imprint America's Best Comics;
Awesome Entertainment's "Supreme" series, ''Judgment Day Alpha'';
Hero Comics' ''Champions'';
Image Comics' ''
Freak Force'' and others.
In 1992 he began adapting a childhood creation, ''
WildStar,'' with Jerry Ordway for creator-owned company Image Comics. ''WildStar: Sky Zero'' was the title of the miniseries that was written, inked, edited and produced by Al, and penciled by Jerry Ordway.
He continued his working relationship with Ordway, inking Marvel's ''
The Avengers'' vol. 2.
He continues to do frequent work for DC and Marvel, inking such comics as Marvel's ''
Captain Marvel'' #25 (Sept. 2004), ''Marvel Holiday Special'' #1 (Jan. 2006) and Bill Morrison and Scott Shaw's new Captain Carrot mini-series (sometime in 2007).
Awards
★
Eisner Award (2000):
Best Single Issue/Single Story - ''Tom Strong'' #1 (ABC Comics): "How Tom Strong Got Started," by Alan Moore, Chris Sprouse, and Al Gordon
★ Eisner Award (2000):
Best Serialized Story - ''Tom Strong'' #4–7 (ABC Comics), by Alan Moore, Chris Sprouse, Al Gordon, and guest artists
References
★
Grand Comics Database