Doug Mahnke
Doug Mahnke | |
---|---|
Mahnke at Emerald City Comicon in 2010 | |
Born |
Douglas Mahnke Minnesota |
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Penciller, Inker |
Notable works |
Batman Black Adam: The Dark Age Final Crisis Green Lantern, vol. 4 JLA, vol. 3 |
Douglas "Doug" Mahnke (pronounced MAN-key) is an American comic book artist and penciller.
Biography
Mahnke's first prominent work was for The Mask, and he has since worked for DC Comics on JLA, Batman with writer Judd Winick, and Seven Soldiers: Frankenstein with Grant Morrison. Mahnke's work on Batman included the controversial story detailing how the previously deceased second Robin, Jason Todd, was alive and actively working against Batman's interests as the Red Hood.[1] Mahnke also worked on the critically acclaimed prestige one-shot Batman: The Man Who Laughs with writer Ed Brubaker.
His work also includes titles such as Major Bummer, Superman: The Man of Steel, Team Zero and Justice League Elite. He was the original artist for the Dark Horse Comics title X, a run inked by Jimmy Palmiotti, as well as being the cover artist for King Tiger/Motorhead, a two-issue series set in the same universe as X. In 2005, with comic book inker Tom Nguyen, Mahnke produced two comic book art instructional DVDs. In 2006, he took over the art for Stormwatch P.H.D. for Wildstorm Comics. His work in 2007 included the DC mini, Black Adam: The Dark Age written by Peter Tomasi, detailing Black Adam's mourning over his wife Isis and regaining his powers. In 2008, he reunited with Tomasi to pencil an issue of Nightwing for the writer.
Mahnke was an important collaborator with writer Grant Morrison on DC's event series Final Crisis, pencilling the Requiem one-shot and the two-issue Superman Beyond 3D tie-in. Mahnke also pencilled the final pages of the main series' 6th issue featuring the "death" of Batman, and replaced artist J. G. Jones entirely on the series finale issue #7 over concerns of Jones' speed.[2]
Starting in July 2009, Mahnke became the ongoing artist for DC's Green Lantern with writer Geoff Johns, right at the beginning of the Blackest Night storyline.[3][4]
He drew The Multiversity: Ultra Comics (May 2015), the eighth issue of Grant Morrison's The Multiversity project.[5]
Bibliography
Comics work (interior pencil art) includes:
Dark Horse
- Aliens: Stronghold, miniseries, #1-4 (1994)
- Dark Horse Presents #25-29 (1988–89)
- Homicide Special: The Hungry Gods (one-shot, 1990)
- King Tiger & Motorhead #1-2 (1996)
- The Mask #1-4 (1991)
- The Mask Returns #1-4 (1992–93)
- The Mask Strikes Back #1-5 (1995)
- Mayhem (The Mask): #1-4 (1989)
- Randy Bowen's Decapitator #1 (1998)
- Space Bunnies Must Die! #1 (1998)
- Walter: Campaign of Terror #1-4 (1994)
- X #1-5, 9 (1994)
DC
- Action Comics #775 ("What's So Funny About Truth, Justice & the American Way?," story, along with Lee Bermejo) (2001)
- Batman #635-639, 641, 645, 647-648 (2005–06)
- Batman: The Man Who Laughs, graphic novel, #1 (2005)
- Batman and Robin, v2, #31, Annual #2 (2014)
- Batman/Superman #31-32 (2016)
- Black Adam: The Dark Age, miniseries, #1-6 (2007–08)
- Countdown to Final Crisis #3, 8 (2008)
- Final Crisis #6 (along with J. G. Jones and Carlos Pacheco), #7 (full art) (2009)
- Final Crisis: Requiem #1 (2008)
- Final Crisis: Superman Beyond, miniseries, #1-2 (2008–09)
- Green Lantern, vol. 4, #43-48, 50-62, 64-67 (2009–11)
- Green Lantern, vol. 5, #1-20 (2011–13)
- JLA #61-68, 70, 72, 74-75, 78-79, 84-90, 100; Secret Files 2004 (2002–04)
- JLA/Cyberforce (2005)
- Justice League, vol. 2, #25, 29-33 (2014)
- Justice League of America, vol. 3, #6-8 (2013)
- Justice League Elite #1-12 (2004–05)
- DC Comics Presents: Flash (one-shot, DC Comics, 2004)
- Seven Soldiers: Frankenstein, miniseries, #1-4 (2006)
- Gen¹³ #38 (1999)
- Hitman/Lobo: That Stupid Bastich! (2000)
- Lobo/Mask, miniseries, #1-2 (1997)
- Major Bummer #1-15 (1997–98)
- Martian Manhunter #24 (2000)
- Masks: Too Hot for TV! (2004)
- The Multiversity: Ultra Comics (one-shot, 2015)
- Nightwing #151 (along with Shawn Moll) (2009)
- Superman: Lex 2000 (5-pages only) (2001)
- Secret Origins, vol. 3, #1 (Tim Drake story) (2014)
- Stormwatch P.H.D. #1-4, 6-7 (2007)
- Superman: Rebirth #1 (2016)
- Superman, vol. 4, #5 (along with Patrick Gleason) (2016)
- Superman and Batman: World's Funnest (among other artists) (2000)
- Superman: The Man of Steel #87-89, 91, 93, 95-98, 100, 102-105, 107-108, 110-111, 114-118 (1999–2001)
- Superman/Wonder Woman #13-17 (along with Ed Benes); 18-27 (2014-16)
- Team Zero, miniseries, #1-6 (2006)
- World's Finest: Our Worlds at War (5-pages only) (2001)
- Worldstorm #1 (2006)
Other publishers
- Silver Sable and the Wild Pack #26 (Marvel, 1994)
Covers only
- Dark Horse Presents #49, 64, 134 (Dark Horse, 1991–1998)
- Dr. Giggles #1-2 (Dark Horse, 1992)
- Comics' Greatest World: Arcadia #4 (Dark Horse, 1993)
- Comics' Greatest World: Vortex #1 (Dark Horse, 1993)
- Out of the Vortex #1 (Dark Horse, 1993)
- Barb Wire: Ace of Spades #3-4 (Dark Horse, 1996)
- King Tiger & Motorhead #1-2 (Dark Horse, 1996)
- Randy Bowen's Decapitator #1 (Dark Horse, 1998)
- The Mask: Toys in the Attic #1-4 (Dark Horse, 1998)
- Superman: The Man of Steel #99, 101 (DC Comics, 2000)
- Batman #573 (DC Comics, 2000)
- Superman #158 (DC Comics, 2000)
- Adventures of Superman #580, 629 (DC Comics, 2000–2004)
- Action Comics #573 (DC Comics, 2000)
- JLA #69, 71, 73, 76, 80-83, 90-93 (DC Comics, 2002–2004)
- Outsiders #18-19, 21-23 (DC Comics, 2005)
- Stormwatch P.H.D. #5 (Wildstorm, 2007)
- Number of the Beast #1 (Wildstorm, 2008)
- Nightwing #144 (DC Comics, 2008)
- JLA: Classified #39 (DC Comics, 2008)
- Blackest Night: Tales of the Corps #3 (DC Comics, 2009)
- Blackest Night #8 (DC Comics, 2009)
- inFamous #1-2 (DC Comics, 2011)
- Flashpoint: Frankenstein & The Creatures of the Unknown #1-3 (DC Comics, 2011)
- Green Lantern Corps v2 #1 (DC Comics, 2011)
- DC Universe Online: Legends #16-17 (DC Comics, 2011–2012)
- Green Lantern v5 #6 (DC Comics, 2012)
Notes
- ↑ Batman: Under the Hood Volumes 1 and 2
- ↑ J.G. Jones apologizes for inability to finish Final Crisis
- ↑ Doug Mahnke Named New Green Lantern Artist, Newsarama, March 18, 2009
- ↑ Mahnke Business - Talking with the New Green Lantern Artist, Newsarama, March 31, 2009
- ↑ Rogers, Vaneta (March 27, 2015). "Vivisecting Multiversity: Doug Mahnke on Ultra Comics". Newsarama. Archived from the original on September 14, 2015.
In this week's world-hopping Ultra Comics chapter of Grant Morrison's The Multiversity, artist Doug Mahnke helped the writer define Earth 33 — the supposed "real" world, yet one that's clearly re-focused through the writer's mind-bending lens.
References
- Doug Mahnke at the Grand Comics Database
- Doug Mahnke at the Comic Book DB
- PLuGHiTz Live! An interview with Doug Mahnke