Kevin Maguire (artist)
Kevin Maguire | |
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Maguire at the Big Apple Convention in Manhattan, October 18, 2009
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Born | Kearny, New Jersey[1] |
September 9, 1960
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Writer, Penciller, Inker |
Notable works
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Justice League Defenders |
Awards | Russ Manning Best Newcomer Award (1988) |
Kevin Maguire (born September 9, 1960)[2] is an American comic book penciller, known for his work on series such as Justice League, Batman Confidential, Captain America and X-Men.
Contents
Career
Maguire's first credited published comics work included pages for The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe vol. 2 and Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe.[3] In 1987, Maguire was the artist on the relaunch of Justice League written by Keith Giffen and J. M. DeMatteis.[4] Maguire left the series with issue #24 (February 1989)[3] but returned for Giffen and DeMatteis' final story in #60 (March 1992).[5] The two writers and Maguire reunited in 2003 for the Formerly Known as the Justice League miniseries[6] and its 2005 sequel, "I Can't Believe It's Not the Justice League" published in JLA Classified. Maguire's collaborations with Giffen and DeMatteis include Defenders and the Metal Men back-up stories in the 2009 revival of the Doom Patrol.
Maguire was one of the artists who launched the Team Titans series in 1992.[7] He has frequently collaborated with writer Fabian Nicieza on series such as Adventures of Captain America, X-Men, and Batman Confidential.[3]
Maguire and George Pérez alternated as artists of the revival of the Worlds' Finest series, which was written by Paul Levitz.[8] Maguire was to have reunited with Giffen and DeMatteis on the Justice League 3000 series[9] but was removed from the project by DC.[10]
Bibliography
Interior art
DC
- Batman Confidential #17-21 (2008)
- DC Retroactive: JLA - The '90s #1 (2011)
- DCU Holiday Special #1 (among other artists) (2009)
- Doom Patrol, vol. 5 (Metal Men) #1-4, 6-7 (2009–10)
- Fairest in All the Land HC (2014)
- Formerly Known As The Justice League, miniseries (Super Buddies) #1-6 (2003–04)
- Gen13 #42 (1999)
- Hawk and Dove vol. 3 #20, 25 (1991)
- Injustice: Gods Among Us (digital comic) #19 (2013)
- JLA 80-Page Giant #1 (1998)
- JLA: Created Equal miniseries #1-2 (2000)
- JLA Classified #4-9 (2005)
- Justice League #40 (among other artists) (2015)
- Justice League International, #1-12, 16-19, 22-24, 60, Annual #5 (1987–92)
- Just Imagine Stan Lee creating The Flash (2002)
- Legion Of Super-Heroes #23 (2013)
- My Greatest Adventure, miniseries, ("Tanga" feature) #1-6 (2011–12)
- New Titans #86 (among other artists) (1992)
- Secret Origins (Deadman) #15; (Teen Titans) Annual #3 (1987–89)
- Silver Age: The Brave and The Bold (Batman and Metal Men) #1 (2000)
- Superman vol. 2 #177 (with Ed McGuinness) (2002)
- Superman/Batman #27 (2006)
- Team Titans #1-3 (1992)
- Weird Worlds, miniseries ("Tanga" feature), #1-4 (2011)
- Worlds' Finest, #1-4, 0, 6-7, 10, 12 (with George Pérez) (2012-2013)
Marvel
- Avengers Annual #18 (among other artists) (1989)
- Adventures of Captain America, miniseries, #1-4 (1991)
- Captain America, vol. 3, #50 (2002)
- Defenders, miniseries, #1-5 (2005–06)
- Fantastic Four vol. 3 Annual 2001
- The Incredible Hulk Annual #18 (1992)
- Spider-Man Holiday Special #1995
- Spider-Man: The Short Halloween #1 (2009)
- X-Men Forever miniseries #1-6 (2001)
- X-Men Unlimited #35 (2002)
Other publishers
- Strikeback!, miniseries, #1-3 (Malibu Comics, 1994)
- Trinity Angels #1-5, 12 (Acclaim, 1997–98)
- Velocity: Pilot Season #1 (Image, 2007)
- WildC.A.T.s #22 (Image, 1995)
- Wildstorm Rising #2 (Image, 1995)
Covers only
- Power Man and Iron Fist #123 (Marvel, 1986)
- Adventures of the Outsiders #43 (DC Comics, 1987)
- Tales of the Legion #346 (DC Comics, 1987)
- Tales of the Teen Titans #79 (DC Comics, 1987)
- Secret Origins #20, 48 (DC Comics, 1987–1990)
- L.E.G.I.O.N. #1-18, 32-39, 43 (DC Comics, 1989–1992)
- Justice League International #25 (DC Comics, 1989)
- Justice League America #26-30, 59, Annual #4 (DC Comics, 1989–1992)
- Marvel Comics Presents #25 (Marvel, 1989)
- Justice League Europe #11, 36, Annual #2 (DC Comics, 1990–1992)
- Suicide Squad #38 (DC Comics, 1990)
- Superboy: The Comic Book #2-12, 14-22, Special #1 (DC Comics, 1990–1992)
- The Sensational She-Hulk #23 (Marvel, 1991)
- Justice League Quarterly #4-5 (DC Comics, 1991)
- Hawk and Dove Annual #2 (DC Comics, 1991)
- Starman #38-39 (DC Comics, 1991)
- Robin II #1-4 (DC Comics, 1991)
- Green Lantern #18 (DC Comics, 1991)
- Double Dragon #6 (Marvel, 1991)
- Aquaman #1-7 (DC Comics, 1991–1992)
- The Original Ghost Rider #5 (Marvel, 1992)
- Titans Sell-Out Special (DC Comics, 1992)
- Showcase '93 #2 (DC Comics, 1993)
- Marvel Super-Heroes #14 (Marvel, 1993)
- Man of War #6 (Malibu, 1993)
- Darkstars #13 (DC Comics, 1993)
- Deathstroke the Terminator #29 (DC Comics, 1993)
- Demolition Man #1-4 (DC Comics, 1993–1994)
- Valor #16 (DC Comics, 1994)
- The Solution #6-8 (Malibu, 1994)
- Warstrike #5 (Malibu, 1994)
- Godzilla #5-8 (Dark Horse, 1995–1996)
- The Mask: World Tour #1-4 (Dark Horse, 1995–1996)
- Justice League: A Midsummer's Nightmare #1-3 (DC Comics, 1996)
- Fanboy #3 (DC Comics, 1999)
- X-Men: Phoenix #2 (Marvel, 2000)
- Gambit #13-15 (Marvel, 2000)
- Shadow Reavers #1 (Black Bull, 2001)
- The Legion #36 (DC Comics, 2004)
- Hero Squared X-tra Sized Special #1 (Atomeka, 2005)
- Justice League of America #7 (DC Comics, 2007)
- Aquaman: Sword of Atlantis #55, 57 (DC Comics, 2007)
- Action Comics #864-865 (DC Comics, 2008)
- The Amazing Spider-Man #573 (Marvel, 2008)
- Ambush Bug: Year None #5 (DC Comics, 2009)
- Star Trek: Mission's End #1 (IDW Publishing, 2009)
- X-Factor #200 (Marvel, 2010)
- Booster Gold #32-36 (DC Comics, 2010)
- Justice League: Generation Lost #1-6, 9, 11-22, 24 (DC Comics, 2010–2011)
Awards
- 1988 Russ Manning Best Newcomer Award[11]
- 2004 Eisner Award for Best Humor Publication for Formerly Known as the Justice League, with Keith Giffen, J. M. DeMatteis, and Josef Rubinstein[12]
Nominations
- 1988 Eisner Award for "Best Art Team" for Justice League International #1, with Al Gordon[13]
References
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- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Kevin Maguire at the Grand Comics Database
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- ↑ Manning "1990s" in Dolan, p. 251: "The lauded Giffen/DeMatteis era of the Justice League came to a dramatic close with 'Breakdowns', a sixteen-part storyline that crossed through the pages of both Justice League America and Justice League Europe'."
- ↑ Cowsill, Alan "2000s" in Dolan, p. 311: "In 2003, writers J. M. DeMatteis and Keith Giffen and original artist Kevin Maguire worked on a six-part series reuniting [their version of] the team."
- ↑ Manning "1990s" in Dolan, p. 254: "Marv Wolfman supplied the scripts for each issue, while the art was handled by Kevin Maguire, Gabriel Morrissette, Adam Hughes, Michael Netzer, Kerry Gammill, and Phil Jimenez."
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External links
- Kevin Maguire at the Comic Book DB
- Kevin Maguire at Mike's Amazing World of Comics
- Kevin Maguire at the Lambiek Comiclopedia (Link contains comic nudity)
- Kevin Maguire at the Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators
- Kevin Maguire at Marvel.com
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