Frank Robbins
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Frank Robbins | |
Born | September 9, 1917 |
Died | 1994 |
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Penciller, Writer |
Frank Robbins (September 9, 1917 – 1994) was a notable American comic book and comic strip artist and writer, as well as a prominent painter whose work appeared in museums including the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, where one of his paintings was featured in the 1955 Whitney Annual Exhibition of American Painting. As a writer\editor, Robbins was instrumental in returning The Batman to his gothic roots. His story "One Bullet Too Many" was the first story since the Golden Age in which Batman would work entirely alone in an urban setting.
Besides Batman, Robbins' comic book work appeared in Captain America, Daredevil, Detective Comics, Fear, Flash, Ghost Rider, House of Mystery, House of Secrets, Human Fly, Invaders, Weird War Tales, and Power Man, as well as comic-book adaptations of Man from Atlantis and The Shadow.
Robbins created the Johnny Hazard comic strip in 1944, and did the strip until it ended in 1977.
[edit] External links
- Art & Artifice Page on Robbins with 17 sample pages