Coming into the business, you’d pass through these little agencies until you got to understand what was happening in the business, unless you were really able to have a style strong enough to go directly to the publishers.
About Gil Kane
Gil Kanewas a Latvian-born American comics artist whose career spanned the 1940s to the 1990s and virtually every major comics company and character.
Kane co-created the modern-day versions of the superheroes Green Lantern and the Atom for DC Comics, and co-created Iron Fist and Adam Warlock with Roy Thomas for Marvel Comics.
More quotes from Gil Kane
I was hired to do as many Boy Commando, Newsboy Legion, and Sandman stories as I could.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
But I was also a big mouth, I started to develop a troubled relationship with Harry Shorten.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
I was hired as a penciler.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
But generally speaking, people weren’t fired, art jobs were very hard to get, so something really calamitous had to happen to a person who was working there in order for you to find a space.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
I think the lack of precision and deep focus is why it took me years to build up my work.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
DC used to print up all of their pages, they were the only company that did it.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
Then the war became a real problem and along with other shortages, they started to have paper problems.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
Everything was sensory and I never saw the structure in anything.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
First of all there was a guy named Charles Nicholas, who used to do all of the inking that Jack and Simon didn’t do. Simon used to do splashes and covers, but Charles Nicholas, after a while, did the inside of all of the stuff.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
I just saw the emotion in everything, so I got to feel everything that was going on and that I was viewing, but I couldn’t think in terms of structure, which is the whole point of deep focus.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
I was not too smart and constantly mouthed off and didn’t know anything.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
It was exactly an assembly line. You could look into infinity down these rows of drawing tables.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
In other words, DC was never harmed by the paper shortages.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
If I had one quality that really ruined me and at the same time helped me, it was the fact that I never stopped looking, and by that time I was really working at it.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
Coming into the business, you’d pass through these little agencies until you got to understand what was happening in the business, unless you were really able to have a style strong enough to go directly to the publishers.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
Precision is not one of the qualities that comes out in my work.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
Comics were going down for the second time and here, all of a sudden, came this thing and for the next fifteen years, romance comics were about the top sellers in the field; they outsold everything.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
All of the penciling was consistently done by one person and the inking was whoever could finish on time.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)
Most of us came out of Popeye, so turning Popeye into something believable was tricky enough.
American comic book artist (1926-2000)