Bad girl art
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- For information on bad girl art on movie posters see bad girl movies.
Bad girl art, is the counterpart of good girl art. Comic book Bad Girls are typically tough and violent superheroines. However, while the Good Girls were common in the 1940s and 1950s, Bad Girl Art was common in the comic book market of the 1980s and 1990s.
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[edit] Bad Girls and Good Girls
Bad Girl comic characters differ obviously from Good Girls in their characterization. It is possible that the original comic Bad Girl - before the term was thought up - was Vampirella, whose comics started in the 1970s. When Frank Miller created Elektra, and gave her a complex relationship going beyond the realm of mere villainy to the title hero Daredevil, he also influenced the comic bad girl stereotype. Though the often accepted initial influence for starting the Bad Girl trend was Brian Pulido's Lady Death and his Chaos! line of comics. These books featured all typical characteristics including full figured women, mystical backgrounds and exuberant art paired with decent writing.
Bad Girls, unlike Good Girls, were seldom found in the role of a damsel in distress. Instead, Bad Girls were typically motivated by background stories in which they had been the victims of abuse or domestic violence; others had their loved ones murdered by the villains. Their basic motive was revenge against their abuser and against those who had abused others in a similar way. These themes of revenge made the character's moral code ambiguous, and often made it hard to characterize the character as either a heroine or a villainess leading "Bad Girl" to become the female equivalent of "anti-hero".
Magic, mythology and occult themes were also frequently found in their background stories. Popular backstories for Bad Girls, were that they were demon hunters, fallen/rogue angels, vampires or wielders of a supernaturally bestowed weapon or power. Often, much effort went into creating the character's "cool" mystical/mythological backstory creating an actual well thought out background, which later with little effort going towards making future stories of that caliber.
Their artistic illustrations are closely linked with the highly manneristic and finely inked style of art that is associated with the original "Image Comics" house style. Most such characters are scantily clad. Most of these heroines are very busty and with elongated legs that are often thicker than their waists. These characters frequently wield a large gun or sword, and wear skulls or mystic symbols in their clothing.
Marc Silvestri along with the other early Image Comics artists like Rob Liefeld, Jim Lee and Todd McFarlane's early work are a large influence on the style. Together with the creations of writer Brian Pulido for Chaos!comics a new era started. Artists like Michael Turner continue this style.
Bad Girl comics had their heyday in 1990s. During the peak of the period of the style's popularity, Mike Deodato drew Wonder Woman, a classic Good Girl, in a style that owed much to the visual style of the Bad Girl books. Jim Balent's Catwoman was also revisioned in this style. The books and style remained as popular as ever until manga and anime grew becoming the new industry-wide trend, causing the old trend of bad girls and anti-heroes to be pushed to the far back.
[edit] The revitalization
In recent years, bad girl and T&A (an abbreviation for "Tits and Ass"; a slang term for erotica) titles have been revitalized. The revitalization began when Top Cow, a studio notorious for its T&A stylings, attached Ron Marz and non-T&A artists Mike Choi to its main bad girl book Witchblade. The book was now getting acclaim and wonderful reviews, and other companies took notice.
Many former Bad Girl characters were now being written in a new character driven style. Dynamite Entertainment began to publish Red Sonja focusing on character and using T&A poses only in joke. "Tales of Wonder", which now owns the majority of the Chaos! Comics's characters- put out a new Purgatori comics via Devil's Due Publishing following this new trend. Meanwhile, Bad Girl-queen Lady Death, while remaining true to her roots, has an alternate all-ages version coming out as Medieval Lady Death and even in the classic version it has been toned down a bit. Also notable is the original Bad Girl, Vampirella. While she still keeps the costume, writer Mike Carey and artist Mike Lily put little to no focus on it as they attempt to rework her into an introspective character.
Finally, famed T&A artist Michael Turner launched his company Aspen MLT and, much to everyone's surprise, chose to go with substance over style in his relaunch of Fathom and the rest of his line.
[edit] The characters
The following are examples of bad girls on the market.
- Abbey Chase, Syndey Savage and Natalia Kassel (for Danger Girl)
- Angela
- Avengelyne
- Barb Wire
- BloodRayne
- Bomb Queen
- Cavewoman
- Emma Frost
- Darkchylde
- Demonslayer
- Dogwitch
- Elektra
- Fathom
- Frank Cho's Shanna
- Ghost
- Glory
- Lady Death
- The Magdalena
- Pandora
- Psylocke
- Purgatori
- Ramba
- Red Monika (for Battle Chasers)
- Red Sonja
- Shego
- Shi
- Tarot, Witch of the Black Rose
- Tomb Raider
- Vampirella
- Warrior Nun Areala
- Witchblade
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Strong Women in Comics by Jim Burrows
- Sequential Tart: Bad Girls Revisited by Laura J. DePuy
- Bad Girl Comics
[edit] References
- Femforce: Bad Girl Backlash by Rebekah Black, Stephanie Sanderson, Leah Adezio, Bill Black, and Mark Heike. (AC Comics, 1996) A comic book making fun of the Bad Girl trend, by the publishers of the Femforce comic book series.
- Trina Robbins, The Great Women Superheroes (Kitchen Sink Press, 1996) ISBN 0-87816-481-2