Simon Gane is a British artist from Bath known for his work in the comic book field.

Gane grew up influenced by the comics of Hergé and Jacques Tardi.[1] He attended art school in the U.K.[1] Later comics influences included Christophe Blain and Joann Sfar, as well as the minicomics of Tom Hart, David Lasky, and Adrian Tomine.[1]

Gane's work was first published in his "self-produced punk fanzine, Arnie, and various minicomics before being collected in Punk Strips"[2] (Slab-O-Concrete, 2000).

His first work published in the United States came in 2004 with Eureka Productions in Graphic Classics #9: Robert Louis Stevenson, and the kids' Godzilla comic, All Flee! (Top Shelf Productions). After illustrating the five-issue comic Paris, written by fellow Englishman Andi Watson and published by Slave Labor Graphics, Gane found a home with Vertigo Comics, first with The Vinyl Underground and then Dark Rain: A New Orleans Story and Northlanders. Gane described The Vinyl Underground as being "set in London and featur[ing] an ad-hoc group of self-appointed detectives who become embroiled in occult-tinged crimes with a strong supporting cast of mobsters and so on."[3]

Gane is the official illustrator for the Burning Sky Brewery in East Sussex.[citation needed]

Art style

Gane's work on The Vinyl Underground was deliberately drawn "in a more realistic style" than his usual (self-described as "warped") work, a move which he felt "[had] a constructive effect on my drawing and story-telling."[3]

Awards

Bibliography

Comics

Children's books

  • (with Betty Hicks) Doubles Troubles (Macmillan Publishers, 2010)
  • (with Betty Hicks) Track Attack (Macmillan, 2014)

References

  1. ^ a b c d Spurgeon, Tom. "CR Holiday Interview #3: Simon Gane," Comics Reporter (17 December 2007).
  2. ^ Gane entry, DC Talent Directory. Retrieved 10 Nov. 2021.
  3. ^ a b Blog@Newsarama Archived 2012-02-17 at the Wayback Machine: Andi Watson "Q&A: Simon Gane," 20 July 2007. Accessed 7 August 2008
  4. ^ "Dark Rain: A New Orleans Story," Publishers Weekly (1 Aug. 2010).
  5. ^ Seven, John. "INDIE VIEW: 'Ghost Tree' brings the afterlife down to Earth: This tale of hauntings offers a thoughtful family drama about memories and regret," The Beat (20 Dec. 2019).
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