- Fred Guardineer
Infobox Comics creator
imagesize = 150
caption =
birthname =
birthdate = October 3, 1913
location = Albany,New York
deathdate = 2002
deathplace =
nationality = American
area = Penciller, Inker, Writer
alias = F.G.B.; Gene Baxter; Lance Blackwood
notable works =
awards =Fred Guardineer (October 3, 1913, Albany,
New York – 2002) was an Americanillustrator andcomic book writer -artist best known for his work in the 1930s and 1940s during what historians and fans call theGolden Age of Comic Books , and for his 1950s art on the Western comic-book series "The Durango Kid". A pioneer of the medium itself, Guardineer contributed a feature to the seminal "Action Comics " #1, the comic book that introducedSuperman .He occasionally wrote and illustrated under the pseudonyms F.G.B., Gene Baxter and Lance Blackwood. [ [http://www.bailsprojects.com/(S(yewucbfooo331iff51yhxb45))/bio.aspx?Name=GUARDINEER%2c+FRED Bails, Jerry. "Who's Who of American Comic Books 1928-1999"] ]
Biography
Early life and career
Fred Guardineer broke into the fledgling field of comic books with
DC Comics ' landmark omnibus title "Action Comics" #1 (June 1938), writing, drawing, and lettering the 12-page feature introducing his magician-hero creationZatara . Guardineer was also one of the artists on the existing features "Pep Morgan " (on which he sometimes used thepseudonym Gene Baxter) and, in "Detective Comics ", "Speed Saunders, Ace Investigator". He married Ruth Ball in 1938, and the couple settled inLong Island, New York .Guardineer's early work appeared primarily in DC Comics titles. Later, he went on to draw for
Centaur Publications ; forQuality Comics , where he created the characterBlue Tracer ; andColumbia Comics , where he worked with the former DC editor,Vin Sullivan , who had edited "Action Comics".Later life and career
Guardineer followed Sullivan to the editor's next venture, the comic-book company
Magazine Enterprises , which Sullivan founded. There from 1949-1955, Guardineer drew writerGardner Fox 'sOld West masked-crimefighter series "The Durango Kid".In addition to his illustrating, Guardineer worked 20 years with the
U.S. Postal Service , beginning circa 1955.Award
* 1998
Inkpot Award Quotes
Ron Goulart : "He was a true nonpareil, an artist whose style was unmistakably his own.... His style was almost fully formed from the start. He seems always to have thought in terms of the entire page, never the individual panel. Each of his pages is a thoughtfully designed whole, giving the impression sometimes that Guardineer is arranging a series of similar snapshots into an attractive overall pattern, a personal design that will both tell the story clearly and be pleasing to the eye...." [Goulart, Ron. "The Great Comic Book Artists" (St. Martin's Press, New York, 1986)]Footnotes
References
* [http://www.comics.org/search.lasso?type=credit&query=fred+guardineer&sort=chrono&Submit=Search Grand Comics Database: Fred Guardineer credits]
*Black, Bill. "Fred Guardineer: The M.E. Years", "Alter Ego" #10 (Sept. 2001), p. 15-18
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