Jim Valentino

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Jim Valentino
10.9.10JimValentinoByLuigiNovi1.jpg
Valentino at the New York Comic Con in Manhattan, October 9, 2010.
Born (1952-10-28) October 28, 1952 (age 71)
Nationality American
Area(s) Writer, Penciller, Inker, Editor, Publisher
Notable works
Guardians of the Galaxy
ShadowHawk
http://www.valentinocomics.com

Jim Valentino is an American writer, penciler, editor and publisher of comic books.

Career

1970s – 1992

File:Normalman.jpg
Cover to The Complete normalman trade paperback collecting the whole series.

Valentino began his career in the late 1970s creating small press and mostly autobiographical comics. The early-mid-1980s saw normalman which first appeared as a back-up story in Aardvark-Vanaheim's Cerebus. Aardvark-Vanaheim's Dave Sim and Deni Loubert (Sim's wife at the time) began publishing normalman as a 13-issue limited series but only did so until #8, when Loubert began her own publishing company, Renegade Press, which finished the series. Renegade also published three issues of Valentino's self-titled series, in the mid-late 1980s.

In the late '80s Valentino began working for Marvel Comics on their superhero titles. His most notable work for the company was as writer/ artist on the future-set super-hero series Guardians of the Galaxy and selected issues of What If...?, plus fill-ins on most of Marvel's major titles.

Image Comics

He left Marvel in 1992 to co-found Image Comics with Whilce Portacio, Erik Larsen, Jim Lee, Rob Liefeld, Todd McFarlane and Marc Silvestri. Valentino originated several projects at Image, which he published through his own Shadowline imprint. Unlike at Marvel, where Valentino worked on characters owned by that company, the original Shadowline titles were all creator-owned.

Of these the titles the most notable was the super-hero series ShadowHawk, on which he was both writer and artist. In 1997 he began another series in black and white called A Touch of Silver, a semi-autobiographical novel about a young comic book fan coming of age in the 1960s. Also during this time he repackaged most of his earliest autobiographical work into a trade paperback called Vignettes, with an introduction by Dave Sim.

In 1999 he became the publisher of Image Comics. Under his directorship the company diversified its line considerably. The results were mixed. On one hand, Valentino's efforts led to the discovery of a number of talented creators, including Robert Kirkman and Brian Michael Bendis. On the other hand Image Comics saw a drop in overall sales. Still, he was able to turn the company's first profit in nearly a decade by opening new revenue streams such as sales to traditional book stores and libraries. The company managed to maintain its standing as number three in overall market share.

In 2003, Valentino was replaced as publisher of Image Comics by Erik Larsen, another co-founder of the company. Since then Valentino has resurrected Shadowline, his own arm of Image and has published a wide variety of books including a revived ShadowHawk series, The Collected normalman, a new auto-bio book, Drawing From Life as well as creator owned properties including Bomb Queen, After the Cape and Sam Noir. He also serves on the board of directors of the comic industry charity The Hero Initiative and on its Disbursement Committee.[1] . In 2008 Valentino created Silverline Books an all-ages imprint for original graphic novels.

Bibliography

  • normalman #1–12 (writer and artist, 1984–1986)
  • Guardians of the Galaxy #1–27, Annual #1–2 (writer and penciler, 1990–1992)
  • ShadowHawk #1–18 (writer and artist, 1992–1996)
  • A Touch of Silver #1–6 (writer and artist, 1997)
  • Vignettes: The Auto-Biographical Comix of Valentino 1997)
  • Altered Image #1–3 (writer and penciller, 1998)
  • normalman 20th Anniversary Special #1 (writer and artist, 2004)
  • Drawing From Life #1 (writer and artist, 2007)
  • What If? Vol. 2 #3, 5, 7, #11–12, 25, 30, 41 (writer)
  • Silver Surfer vol. 3 #32–33 (writer)
  • Avengers Vol. 2 #1–4 (1996–1997)

Notes

  1. The Hero Initiative Disbursement Committee Retrieved February 20, 2012

References

External links