Eric Stanton

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The Art of Eric Stanton: For the Man Who Knows His Place
The Art of Eric Stanton: For the Man Who Knows His Place

Eric Stanton (September 30, 1926March 17, 1999; born Ernest Stanzoni) was an American bondage and fetish illustrator, cartoonist, and comic-book artist.

Although the majority of his work depicted female dominance scenarios, he also produced work showing the inverse. Stanton also incorporated bisexual, homosexual, and transgender imagery into some of his later work.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life and career

Stanton began his career in 1947 at Irving Klaw's Movie Star News company in New York City, gaining employment by boasting he could draw better than any of the artists then working for Klaw. He afterwarded attended the Cartoonists and Illustrators School , under Batman inker Jerry Robinson and others. One classmate was future Spider-Man co-creator Steve Ditko, with whom from 1958 to 1966 or 1968 (accounts differ), Stanton shared a Manhattan studio at 43rd Street and Eighth Avenue. Some of Stanton's work during this period shows heavy Ditko influence (see below), although Ditko has denied contributing to Stanton's art.[1]

Stanton, in a 1988 interview with comics historian Greg Theakston, recalled that though his contribution to Spider-Man was "almost nil", he and Ditko had "worked on storyboards together [and] I added a few ideas. But the whole thing was created by Steve on his own. ... I think I added the business about the webs coming out of his hands".[2]

[edit] Later career

After Klaw died in 1966, Stanton supported himself via self-publishing and distributing his work to a quasi-underground network of subcribers and patrons. His mimeographed/photocopied "Stantoons" series continued to his death in 1999 and featured many of his most well-known post-Klaw concepts such as Blunder Broad (a sexy parody of Wonder Woman) and the Princkazons.

Stanton art from reprint comic Tops and Bottoms #1 (Oct. 1997) from his time as studio-mate with Steve Ditko.
Stanton art from reprint comic Tops and Bottoms #1 (Oct. 1997) from his time as studio-mate with Steve Ditko.

[edit] Legacy

In addition to books about his work, Stanton's art was reprinted in the 1990s in Fantagraphics Books' Eros Comix comic book Tops and Bottoms, issues subtitlesd "Bound Beauty" (#1), "Lady in Charge" (#2), "Broken Engagement" (#3), "Broken Engagement 2" (#4), as well as in that publisher's Bizarre Comix #3 and Confidential TV.

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Ditko Looked Up: "Ditko & Stanton"
  2. ^ Theakston, Greg. The Steve Ditko Reader (Pure Imagination, Brooklyn, NY, 2002; ISBN 1-56685-011-8), p. 14 (unnumbered, misordered as page 16)

[edit] References

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