Misplaced Pages

Geoff Senior: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 02:41, 18 September 2006 editCrystallina (talk | contribs)Rollbackers52,432 edits Stub-sorting. You can help!← Previous edit Revision as of 21:55, 10 December 2006 edit undoSpawnofunicron (talk | contribs)5 editsNo edit summaryNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Geoff Senior''' is a ] ], best known for his work in the ] field in the 1980s, mainly for ] UK. Senior is perhaps best remembered for his art for the Marvel '']'' series. He debuted on the British title drawing #42, and would become one of the title's most prolific and popular artists (always inking his own pencils), thanks to his geometric style, which perfectly suited the dynamics of the series. He would work on a number of other titles for Marvel UK, including '']'' (1988), '']'' (which he co-created with ], and drew all ten issues of), '']'' (another character he helped create, initially as a guest star for Transformers) and '']'' Weekly, as well as several Marvel UK annuals. He would follow Furman across to Marvel USA in 1989, drawing Transformers US #61 - he would draw four more issues before the title's cancellation, including the classic #75. He would draw several other titles in the early 1990s, including Hell's Angel (later renamed as Dark Angel) and several issues of What If...?, as well as returning to Transformers for the final few issues of Transformers Generation 2. '''Geoff Senior''' is a ] ], best known for his work in the ] field in the 1980s, mainly for ] UK. Senior is perhaps best remembered for his art for the Marvel '']'' series. He debuted on the British title drawing #42, and would become one of the title's most prolific and popular artists (always inking his own pencils), thanks to his geometric style, which perfectly suited the dynamics of the series. He would work on a number of other titles for Marvel UK, including '']'' (1988), '']'' (which he co-created with ], and drew all ten issues of), '']'' (another character he helped create, initially as a guest star for Transformers) and '']'' Weekly, as well as several Marvel UK annuals. He would follow Furman across to Marvel USA in 1989, drawing Transformers US #61 - he would draw four more issues before the title's cancellation, including the classic #75. He would draw several other titles in the early 1990s, including Hell's Angel (later renamed as Dark Angel) and several issues of What If...?, as well as returning to Transformers for the final few issues of Transformers Generation 2.


Since then, Senior has largely worked in advertising, though he has returned to Transformers on occasion - for the 1997 BotCon convention comic ''Reaching the Omega Point'', the cover for the 1999 Transforce convention comic ''The Last Days of Optimus Prime'', several covers for Titan Publishing's series of Transformers TPBs, and the cover of Issue 1 for ]'s 2003 UK title Transformers Armada. Since then, Senior has largely worked in advertising, though he has returned to Transformers on occasion - for the 1997 BotCon convention comic ''Reaching the Omega Point'', two illustrations for the Transforce convention book ''Alignment'', several covers for Titan Publishing's series of Transformers TPBs, and the cover of Issue 1 for ]'s 2003 UK title Transformers Armada.


==External links== ==External links==

Revision as of 21:55, 10 December 2006

Geoff Senior is a British artist, best known for his work in the comic book field in the 1980s, mainly for Marvel UK. Senior is perhaps best remembered for his art for the Marvel Transformers series. He debuted on the British title drawing #42, and would become one of the title's most prolific and popular artists (always inking his own pencils), thanks to his geometric style, which perfectly suited the dynamics of the series. He would work on a number of other titles for Marvel UK, including Doctor Who Magazine (1988), Dragon's Claws (which he co-created with Simon Furman, and drew all ten issues of), Death's Head (another character he helped create, initially as a guest star for Transformers) and Action Force Weekly, as well as several Marvel UK annuals. He would follow Furman across to Marvel USA in 1989, drawing Transformers US #61 - he would draw four more issues before the title's cancellation, including the classic #75. He would draw several other titles in the early 1990s, including Hell's Angel (later renamed as Dark Angel) and several issues of What If...?, as well as returning to Transformers for the final few issues of Transformers Generation 2.

Since then, Senior has largely worked in advertising, though he has returned to Transformers on occasion - for the 1997 BotCon convention comic Reaching the Omega Point, two illustrations for the Transforce convention book Alignment, several covers for Titan Publishing's series of Transformers TPBs, and the cover of Issue 1 for Panini's 2003 UK title Transformers Armada.

External links


Stub icon

This profile of a British comics creator, writer, or artist is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: