List of female comics creators
Although traditionally women artists have long been a minority in the comics business, they have made notable impact since its very beginning, and more and more female artist gain recognition, along with the maturing of the medium.
Women creators have worked in every genre, from superheroes to romance, westerns to war, crime to horror. Their modes of expression and subjects of discussion have expanded as women's role in society has changed. The pressure of market forces may result in more stereotypical depictions of women and their concerns,[1] or they may be shut out by male colleagues due to their frankness[2] and thus resort to alternative publishing routes. However, many still have found mainstream and/or underground success telling the stories they want to tell.
Background
USA
Newspaper comics
In the early 20th century, when the US newspaper comics market was in its infancy, William Randolph Hearst brought the artist Nell Brinkley over from the competing Denver Post, and although not doing comics herself, her romantic and glamorous imagery became an inspiration to a generation of female comics artists.
Another style popular around the time was cute comics with doll-like round-cheeked children. In 1909, Rose O'Neill created The Kewpies, a series continuing for decades and widely used in various marketing purposes.
Another cartoonist, Grace Wiederseim (also known as Grace Drayton and Grace Gebbie),[3] worked in a similar vein and, from the 1910s until the 1930s, created a multitude of series with cherubic children bearing names such as Toodles, Dimples, Dolly Dingle, and Dottie Darling. She was also the creator of the "Campbell kids", which Campbell Soup employed for marketing purposes up until the 1930s.
Edwina Dumm created a long-lasting series in 1918, Cap Stubbs and Tippie, about a boy and a dog, although the frisky dog soon took over the strip as its most popular character. The series ran until the 1960s.
In the 1920s, the USA underwent an economic boom and widespread social change, leading to the appearance of the "flapper", a female subculture receiving a lot of media attention at the time. Flappers enjoyed partying, jazz music and free dating, and defied many of the social norms surrounding women at the time. Several female cartoonists picked up on the flapper stereotype, often working in a stylish art deco style, including Ethel Hays (with her comic strip Marianne and her famous cartoon Flapper Fanny), Virginia Huget (Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Babs in Society), Gladys Parker (Gay and her Gang) and Marjorie Henderson Buell (Dashing Dot).
In the 1930s, the great depression had struck the USA, and stories about poor but happy families, and their stoic struggles to make a living, became popular reader fare. Martha Orr created one of the most successful series, Apple Mary, about an old lady selling apples around the neighborhood, in 1932.
The accounts on the series' final fate differs. Most sources state that in 1938, she left it to her female assistant Dale Conner, who renamed it Mary Worth, although King Features Syndicate's own account claims that Apple Mary folded and Mary Worth was its replacement. In 1940, a new writer Allen Saunders was brought in, and Conner and Saunders began signing the strip with the joint pseudonym "Dale Allen", which remained after Conner left the series. Mary Worth has proven a successful concept, and is still syndicated around the globe.
In 1935, Marjorie Henderson Buell (signature "Marge") created the comic panel Little Lulu, later spawning a successful comic book series by John Stanley and Irving Tripp. This character inspired the name for the organization Friends of Lulu, an organization promoting reading and authoring of comics to girls and women.
In 1940, veteran artist Dale Messick created the comic strip Brenda Starr, about a glamorous reporter with a soap opera-like love life. After Messick left the series, it was continued solely by other female artists.
In 1941, Tarpé Mills created the superheroine strip Miss Fury for the Sunday pages. Striking a chord among the readers, she was drawing the strip until 1951.
Jackie Ormes was the first nationally syndicated female black cartoonist with her series Torchy Brown, created in 1937 as a humoristic adventure strip lasting for three years, and picked up again in 1950 as Torchy Brown's Heartbeats, basically revamped as a black version of Brenda Starr, with the young black eponymous character stumbling onto adventure after adventure, and going from one love interest to another, although the series also took up more serious subjects such as racial bigotry and environmental pollution. The series never became a widespread success, since it was only picked up by black-owned newspapers.
In the 1940s, teen comics became a popular genre. This was a rather down-to-earth genre, mostly comedy-inclined and marketed towards young teenage girls, where young, often gangly, teenagers went through different problems with the opposite sex and dating. Notable artists to mention include Hilda Terry (Teena, 1941), Marty Links (Emmy Lou, 1944) and Linda Walter (Susie Q. Smith, together with her husband Jerry Walter on scripts). These three artists all had earlier works in the fashion field. In 1951, after some internal arguments within the organization, Terry became the first female cartoonist to be accepted to the National Cartoonists Society.
Other successful strips include Cathy Guisewite's semi-autobiographical Cathy, about a neurotic city woman and her problems with shopping and romance, and Lynn Johnston's For Better or For Worse, about the Patterson household and their family relationships.
Overtly feminist and containing much pointed social commentary in addition to character-based humor, Nicole Hollander's strip Sylvia is distributed nationally by Tribune Media Services, with 19 published books collecting strip selections. Sylvia's strong personality and forcefully critical views distinguish her from less assertive women cartoon characters.
Due to the syndicates' often strict demands on recurring characters and an unwillingness to risk offending readers, some cartoonists have gone into self-syndication to maintain control of their work. Some long-running self-syndicated comics are the feminist Maxine or Laughing Gas by cartoonist and author Marian Henley (not to be confused with John M. Wagner's Hallmark character) and the surrealist Way Lay or Story Minute by underground veteran Carol Lay.
Mainstream comic books
Comic books, as well, have had a number of female artists, such as prolific Golden Age artist Ruth Atkinson Ford (Millie the Model and Patsy Walker).
One publisher in particular, Fiction House, used many female cartoonists, both on staff and through Eisner & Iger, one of the era's comics "packagers" that would supply comic books on demand to publishers testing the emerging medium. Action and adventure-oriented genres were popular at this time, and Fiction House's forte was capable and beautiful female protagonists, working as pilots, detectives, or jungle adventuresses. Women working for the publisher include Lily Renée,[4] Fran Hopper[5] and future romance artists Ruth Atkinson and Ann Brewster. These stories were frequently written by a female writer, as well: Ruth Roche, later an editor. Before finding fame as a crime novelist, Patricia Highsmith wrote for Black Terror and other comic books.
In the 1950s Marie Severin, sister of artist John Severin, was a frequent EC and Atlas/Marvel colorist, later drawing her own stories as well. Her cartoon style made her a frequent contributor to Marvel's Not Brand Echh satirical title of the late 1960s. Another prolific artist was Ramona Fradon, who drew Aquaman and was co-creator of Metamorpho.
Later artists and writers include Ann Nocenti (creator of Typhoid Mary and Longshot), Louise Simonson (Power Pack writer), June Brigman (Power Pack artist), Gail Simone (Welcome to Tranquility) and Devin Grayson (Batman writer).
Underground, alternative and independent
The underground comix movement did eventually attract female artists, being a venue that allowed more mature themes and personal work than the commercial newspaper and comic book industry of the time. A pioneer in this market was Trina Robbins, a driving force in the creation of the early all-female comix books It ain't me, babe and All Girl Thrills, and later founder of the anthology series Wimmen's Comix. Robbins has later moved on to a long career in comics, and has written several books about female cartoonists and their comics.
Another all-female comix book series was Tits & Clits Comix, founded by Lyn Chevely and Joyce Farmer, who were inspired by the honesty in the underground comix, but appalled by the frequent macho attitude. With the conviction that sex was political, the series was created with the focus of sex and sexuality from a female perspective.
Artists who grew out of this movement include Lee Marrs (Pudge Girl Blimp about an overweight self-obsessed wannabe hippie girl), Shary Flenniken (Trots and Bonnie about two precocious girls trying to make sense of their suburban life), Aline Kominsky (The Bunch, autobiographical depiction of her least flattering sides) and Dori Seda (autobiographical stories).
After the underground scene turned into the alternative scene, female artists have continued doing personal work, such as Debbie Drechsler (Daddy's Girl, 1996, about incest and sexual abuse during childhood) and Phoebe Gloeckner (Diary of a Teenage Girl, 2002).
The scene's unapologetic attitude also inspired artists outside the US, such as Canadian Julie Doucet, whose surrealist semi-autobiographical series Dirty Plotte became a worldwide cult favorite in the 90's.
The underground/alternative market allowed for a more open depiction of sexuality, and in the 70's and 80's open lesbian and bisexual artists started telling their stories in comic book form, such as Mary Wings (artist of the first all-lesbian comix book Come Out Comix (1973)), Roberta Gregory (Bitchy Bitch, and frequent contributor to Gay Comix) and Alison Bechdel (Dykes to Watch Out For and graphic novel Fun Home, 2006).
In the independent market, that began to appear from the 70's, Wendy Pini, together with her husband Richard Pini, started the manga-inspired series Elfquest, which soon became a major sleeper hit.
Later artists have followed in her footsteps, such as Colleen Doran with her fantasy series A Distant Soil (originally published at the Pinis' company WaRP Graphics, although Doran left due to copyright disagreements).
Other popular artists include Donna Barr (Desert Peach, about Erwin Rommel's fictional gay brother), Jill Thompson (Scary Godmother, a friendly witch in a Halloween environment) and Linda Medley (Castle Waiting, daily lives of fairytale characters).
Europe
Although a minority, there have been female artists working in the medium even since its earliest days. One of the earliest female artists was Marie Duval, who, together with her husband Charles Henry Ross, was co-creator and artist of one of the earliest recurring characters in modern cartoons and comics, Ally Sloper.
Tove Jansson is best known as a book writer, but she did also write and draw comics featuring her characters, "The Moomins" in the 50's, containing the same poetical qualities as her books.
In the UK, Posy Simmonds started her career in 1979 with the weekly comic strip The Silent Three of St. Botolph's for The Guardian about the daily life of three former schoolfriends, which lasted for a decade. She had also written children's books, often in comic form, such as Fred (where later a successful animated special) and Lulu and The Flying Babies. For the 90's and 00's, she has done more serious works, inspired by literary classics, such as Gemma Bovery and Tamara Drewe.
France/Belgium
An early veteran on the Franco-Belgian market was Liliane Funcken (née Schorils), who, after meeting her husband Fred Funcken (himself a comics veteran), teamed up with him to embark on a long-lasting career for the magazine Tintin from the 50's up until the 80's, where the couple collaborated on comics and illustration. They have adopted a realistic style, and mostly specialise in historic works.
One of the earliest successful female artists was Claire Bretécher, who started her career in the 60's and is famed for her humor series Les Frustrés and the co-creation of the magazine L'Écho des savanes along with Gotlib and Mandryka.
In 1976, the French magazine Ah ! Nana was launched. It was inspired by the feminist underground comix from the USA, published by Humanoïdes Associés and was an attempt to branch out of Metal Hurlant by the same editor with a majority of female artists. It tried to adhere to the rock'n'roll attitude of the former magazine, and sometimes featured male artists from the magazine, such as Jacques Tardi and Moebius. Every issue was built around a theme, such as nazism or homo- and transsexuality. Issue 7, 1978, about sadomasochism was deemed pornography and was forbidden to sell to minors below 18 years of age, a rule which by extension forbade kiosks to advertise the magazine, thus cutting off many of the magazine's market outlets. In the end, this forced the cancellation of the magazine due to bad sales, through means considered by the authors as censorship of a feminist voice. The last issue was issue 9, themed around incest. No similar comics magazine has since appeared in the Franco-Belgian market, but it helped launch or consolidate the careers of Chantal Montellier (gritty, feminist, political sci-fi), Nicole Claveloux (surreal fantasy) and Florence Cestac (funny cartoons).
Another author that appeared during this time was Annie Goetzinger, who worked in a realistic art nouveau style and drew adventures with female protagonists. She frequently collaborated with Pierre Christin, and has won two awards at the Angoulême festival.
In the beginning of the 21st century, Marjane Satrapi released the critically acclaimed Persepolis about her childhood and coming-of-age in a politically turbulent Iran, and in Europe.
Asia
Countries with a huge percentage of female comics creators include Japan, but also South Korea.
Japan
Main article:
Shoujo manga
The first really successful female manga artist was likely Machiko Hasegawa, creator of the family-oriented Sazae-san, launched in 1946 and running in the newspaper Asahi Shinbun for decades.
Comics directed at girls (shoujo manga) have had a long history in Japan, and began to grow out of magazines directed at girls and teenagers throughout the 20th century. These were lifestyle magazines with romantic short stories and fashionable illustrations, supervised by a male editorial staff.
In 1953 the "God of Manga" Osamu Tezuka published his classic Princess Knight, with a longer, more complex storyline and a genderly ambiguous protagonist.
The long-running monthly magazines Ribon and Nakayoshi did both appear already in the 50's, and the weeklies Shojo Friend and Margaret appeared in 1963, so in the 50's and 60's, there were already several comics aimed at women, but most of these were written by men (including Tetsuya Chiba, Mitsuteru Yokoyama and Fujio Akatsuka), and failed to attract a bigger audience, due to their mostly passive and uninteresting characters.
In the 60's, one woman artist in particular, Yoshiko Nishitani, decided to have teenagers in lead roles, drawn in a glamorous fashion with (earlier a taboo topic) romance as a significant theme. This helped pave the way for a great wave in the late 60's-early 70's when a loose connection of women, later given the name year 24 group, merged Tezuka's "story manga" narratives with the romantic art style from the girls' lifestyle magazines and, in the process, revolutionized the genre, both in visual experimentation (including montage-like page layouts) and story subjects.
Some of these artists such as Keiko Takemiya and Moto Hagio wrote stories featuring young gay male lovers involved in tragic relationships. These stories proved immensely popular and gave birth to the yaoi genre, still very popular. (Keiko Takemiya later made the popular sci-fi Toward the Terra.)
Since then, girl comics have been a flourishing scene, which, in general, has both been created and read by women, has had a notable part of the market, and, as manga is becoming increasingly popular abroad, more and more is making an impact on Western countries.
Later popular artists include the highly prolific and successful Rumiko Takahashi (drawing primarily shonen stories for boys) as well as the female collective Clamp.
Japan doesn't only produce comics for children, but also has a seinen (adult men) and a josei (adult women) scene, allowing more mature themes and storylines.
Many of the artists working for this market have gained wide recognition among the alternative comics scenes in USA and Europe, including artists such as Kiriko Nananan, Moyoco Anno, Junko Mizuno and Kan Takahama.
List of creators
Many notable female comics creators exist though the field of comics creation is traditionally male-dominated.
This is a list of women who have been involved with producing comic books and comic strips.
American comics
Platinum Age (1897–1937)
- Nina Albright : Artist for comics packager Bernard Baily Studio[7]
- Ruth Atkinson a.k.a. Ruth Atkinson Ford, R. Atkinson: Artist, Fiction House, Timely Comics, Lev Gleason Publications
- Olive Bailey: Artist, Land of the Lost
- Violet Barclay: Timely/Atlas Comics inker
- Toni Blum: Writer, Eisner & Iger studio
- Linda Fite: Writer, The Cat (Marvel Comics)
- Ramona Fradon: Artist, Aquaman and Metamorpho (DC Comics); also, Brenda Starr comic strip (1980–1996)
- Ray Herman[8]: 1940s editor at Holyoke Publishing and elsewhere.[9]
- Patricia Highsmith; Nedor/Standard/Better Comics and others
- Fran Hopper: Fiction House artist
- Virginia Hubbell: Charles Biro's ghost writer, Lev Gleason Publications' Crime Does Not Pay[10]
- Pauline Loth: Timely/Atlas artist
- Lee Marrs: Artist-writer for Star Reach, elsewhere (1970s)
- Elizabeth Holloway Marston: involved in the creation of DC Comics character, Wonder Woman
- Ruth McCully: Fiction House letterer
- Marion McDermott: St. John Publications editor
- Tarpe Mills, pseudonym of June Mills: Cat-Man (Holyoke Comics), Miss Fury
- Ramona Patenaude a.k.a. Pat: artist, Blue Beetle (Fox Comics)
- Lily Renée a.k.a. Reney (Lily Renée Wilhelms Peters and Lily Renée Phlllips): Fiction House and St. John Publications artist
- Ruth Roche: generally credited writer of Phantom Lady (Fox Comics)
- Marie Severin: Prolific EC and Marvel Comics artist
- Marcia Snyder: Fiction House artist
- Daisy Swayze: Fawcett Comics letterer; sister of artist Marc Swayze[11]
- Janice Valleau: Quality Comics artist[10]
- Tatjana Wood: Shazam Award-winning colorist
- Dorothy Woolfolk a.k.a. Dorothy Roubicek: DC Comics' first woman editor
- Laura Allred
- Fiona Avery
- Samm Barnes: Marvel Comics writer
- Donna Barstow: Writer and cartoonist, The New Yorker, and: What Do Women Really Want? Chocolate! (2004, NBM Publishing) ISBN 1-56163-383-6, and Love Me or Go to Hell: True Love Cartoons (2005, Andrews McMeel Universal) ISBN 0-7407-5698-2
- Anina Bennett: Writer, editor at First Comics and Dark Horse Comics. Co-creator of Heartbreakers
- Amber Benson: Writer, Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Dark Horse Comics)
- Karen Berger: Editor, DC Comics' Vertigo imprint
- Maddie Blaustein: Writer, Milestone Comics' Hardware
- Nicole Boose: Editor, Cable & Deadpool (Marvel Comics)
- June Brigman: Artist and co-creator, Power Pack (Marvel Comics); Artist Brenda Starr comic strip (1996-)
- Sarah Byam: Writer, Black Canary (DC Comics), Mode Extreme (Marvel/Razorline)
- Kat Cahill, Writer and creator, I Hate Gallant Girl (Image Comics/ShadowLine)[12]
- Roz Chast : New Yorker staff cartoonist The Party After You Left: Collected Cartoons 1995-2003
- Meloney Crawford Chadwick: Harris Comics editor
- Bobbie Chase: Marvel Comics editor
- Joyce Chin: Artist, Wynonna Earp (IDW),
- Nancy A. Collins: Writer, DC/Vertigo's Swamp Thing
- Amanda Conner: Artist, The Pro (Image Comics), Disney's Gargoyles (Marvel Comics)
- Colleen Coover: Writer and artist.
- Joanna Davidovich
- Rosario Dawson: Writer and co-creator, Occult Crimes Taskforce Image Comics
- Renae De Liz, Artist, Rogue Angel: Teller of Tall Tales (IDW Publishing)[13]
- Tania del Rio: Artist/Writer, Sabrina the Teenage Witch (Archie Comics)
- Rachel Dodson: Inker, Marvel and DC
- Colleen Doran: Writer and artist, A Distant Soil (Image Comics)
- Valerie D'Orazio: Assistant editor, DC Comics
- Leigh Dragoon: Artist, By the Wayside
- Jo Duffy a.k.a. Mary Jo Duffy: Writer and Marvel Comics editor
- Jan Duursema: Artist, Star Wars: Legacy (Dark Horse Comics)
- Mary Fleener: Artist and writer, Slutburger
- Robin Furth: Plotter, The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger Born (Marvel Comics)
- Shaenon K. Garrity: Writer, Marvel Comics' Marvel Holiday Special
- Megan Rose Gedris: Writer, artist and creator, I Was Kidnapped by Lesbian Pirates from Outer Space (Platinum Studios)[14]
- Devin Grayson: Writer, Arsenal, Batman: Gotham Knights, Catwoman, Nightwing (all DC Comics)
- Pia Guerra: Artist, Vertigo's Y The Last Man
- Sandra Hope: Inker, World of Warcraft (WildStorm)
- Eva Hopkins: Writer, colorist and co-creator, Dark Ivory (Image Comics)[15]
- Heidi Hughes: Writer, The Voyages of The SheBuccaneer (Great Big Comics)[16]
- Judith Hunt: Co-writer,co-creator, artist Evangeline (Comico)1984 and online comic Evangeline (August 2008)
- Lora Innes: Writer, artist and creator, The Dreamer (IDW Publishing)[17]
- Jenna Jameson: Creator and plotter, Shadow Hunter (Virgin Comics)
- Jenette Kahn: editor and executive, DC Comics
- Carol Kalish: executive, Marvel Comics
- Annette Kawecki: Marvel Comics letterer
- Barbara Kesel a.k.a. Barbara Randall Kesel: Writer, Rogue Angel: Teller of Tall Tales (IDW Publishing)
- Sheila Keenan: Executive Editor, Scholastic Graphix
- Caitlin R. Kiernan: Writer, Vertigo's The Dreaming
- Kim Krizan: Writer, BOOM! Studio comics
- Elaine Lee: Writer, Vamps (DC Comics), Saint Sinner (Marvel/Razorline)
- Stephanie Lesniak: Artist and co-creator, Blazin' Brandy (Scrap Pictures)
- Linda Ly: Writer, Grimm Fairy Tales (Zenescope Entertainment)[18]
- Cynthia Martin, artist for (among others) Marvel Comics's Star Wars
- Laura Martin: Colorist, Planetary (DC Comics/WildStorm), Astonishing X-Men (Marvel Comics), Ruse (CrossGen)
- Tara McPherson: Cover artist, Vertigo
- Adriana Melo: Artist, Ms. Marvel (Marvel Comics)
- Rachelle Menashe: Writer, Virus (Dark Horse Comics)
- Denise Mina: Writer, Vertigo's Hellblazer
- Mary Mitchell: Artist, Batman: Gotham Knights (DC Comics)
- Leah Moore: Writer, Wildstorm's Albion
- Melanie J. Morgan: Writer, Betty and Veronica, Jughead (Archie Comics)[19]
- Mindy Newell: Writer/editor, Marvel, DC, and First
- Ann Nocenti: Writer, Daredevil (Marvel Comics)
- Sonia Oback: Colorist, "Uncanny X-Men", "X-23: Target X" (Marvel Comics)
- Glynis Oliver: Colorist, X-Men (Marvel Comics)
- Lisa Patrick: Marvel Comics editor
- Jodi Picoult: Writer, DC's Wonder Woman
- Tamora Pierce: Writer, Marvel Comics' White Tiger
- Wendy Pini: Artist and co-creator, Elfquest (WaRP Graphics), and Masque of the Red Death (Go! Comi)
- Rachel Pollack: Writer, Doom Patrol (DC Comics)
- Janice Race: Editor, DC Comics
- Nickiesha Ashanty Ricketts: Writer and Editor
- Susana Romero: Founder, ¡Ka-Boom! Estudio
- Jessica Ruffner: Writer, Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter: Guilty Pleasures (Marvel Comics/Dabel Brothers)
- Sara Ryan: Writer, Me and Edith Head
- Nicola Scott: Artist, Birds of Prey (DC Comics)
- Diana Schutz: Editor, Dark Horse Comics
- Barbara Schulz: Inker, Books of Magic (Vertigo), Micronauts (Image/Devils)
- Jean Simek: Letterer, Marvel Comics and Topps Comics; daughter of Artie Simek
- Kristen Simon: Editor in Chief, Shadowline Comics (Jim Valentino's imprint at Image Comics)
- Gail Simone: Writer, Birds of Prey, Wonder Woman (all DC Comics)
- Louise Simonson a.k.a. Louise Jones: Marvel Comics editor; Writer and co-creator, Power Pack (Marvel Comics);
- Mary Skrenes: Writer and co-creator, Omega the Unknown (Marvel Comics)
- Barbara Slate: Writer, Betty (Archie Comics)
- Beth Sotelo: Colorist, Soul Fire: Dying of the Light (Aspen MLT), Atomika (Mercury Comics)
- Christina Strain: Colorist, Runaways and Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane (all Marvel Comics)
- Jill Thompson: Artist and writer, Wonder Woman, Sandman, and her own Scary Godmother series
- Maggie Thompson: Editor, Comics Buyer's Guide magazine
- Kathleen Webb: Writer, Betty (Archie Comics)
- Christina Weir: Writer, Oni Press
- G. Willow Wilson: Writer, Cairo (Vertigo)
- Amy Wolfram: Writer, Teen Titans: Year One (DC Comics)[20]
- Kim Yale: Writer/editor, DC Comics, Marvel Comics, First Comics, and Warp Graphics
- Christina Z: Writer, Witchblade (Image Comics/Top Cow Productions), Shadow Hunter (Virgin Comics)
American manga
- Tina Anderson Writer, Only Words (Iris Print), Games With Me (The Wild Side), Loud Snow (Gynocrat INK)
- Queenie Chan: Artist/Writer, The Dreaming (Tokyopop)
- Jo Chen: Artist, Wildstorm's Racer X
- Svetlana Chmakova: Artist/Writer, Dramacon (Tokyopop)
- Lindsay Cibos: Artist/Writer, Peach Fuzz (Tokyopop)
- Becky Cloonan: Artist, AiT/Planet Lar's Demo
- Jinky Coronado a.k.a. Meryl "Jinky" Coronado Calanog Campiti: Artist/Writer, Banzai Girl (Arcana Studio)
- Alex de Campi: Writer, Kat & Mouse (Tokyopop)
- Melissa DeJesus: Artist, Sokora Refugees (Tokyopop), daily comic strip My Cage
- Camilla D’Errico: Artist, Make 5 Wishes (Del Rey Manga), Nightmares & Fairy Tales (Slave Labour Graphics)
- Joanna Estep: Artist, Roadsong (Tokyopop)
- Irene Flores: Artist, Mark of the Succubus (Tokyopop)
- Amy Kim Ganter Artist/Writer, Sorcerers & Secretaries (Tokyopop)
- Holly Golightly a.k.a. Holly G!, Fauve: Artist/Writer, School Bites (Broadsword Comics)
- Amy Reeder Hadley: Artist/Writer, Fool's Gold (Tokyopop)
- Lea Hernandez: Artist, Marvel Comics' Marvel Mangaverse: Punisher
- Nina Matsumoto: Artist/Writer, "Yōkaiden" (Del Rey Manga)
Alternative comics
- Carmen Aquino : Writer-artist, "Shaya" "HARLEM" "I Love Alien!"
- Jessica Abel: Writer-artist, La Perdida (Fantagraphics)
- Jennie Breeden: Writer-artist, The Devil's Panties
- Donna Barr
- Fallon Star: Writer, "Epic Win"
- Alison Bechdel: Creator Dykes to Watch Out For
- Gabrielle Bell: Writer/artist, Lucky (Drawn and Quarterly)
- Joyce Brabner: Writer, Our Cancer Year
- Paige Braddock: Creator Jane's World
- Vera Brosgol
- M.K. Brown: Creator Aunt Mary's Kitchen and Dr. N!Godatu
- Jennifer Camper
- Geneviève Castrée: WOELV
- Shannon Chenoweth: Creator/Writer The Line (Misfit Comics)
- Chynna Clugston: Creator, Oni Press's Blue Monday
- Colleen Coover: Creator Small Favors
- Danielle Corsetto: Creator Girls With Slingshots
- Sophie Crumb: Writer/artist, Belly Button (Fantagraphics)
- Dame Darcy: Creator, Fantagraphics' Meatcake
- Jennifer Daydreamer: Creator, Jennifer Daydreamer
- Abby Denson: Creator Tough Love: High School Confidential
- Diane DiMassa
- Colleen Doran: Creator A Distant Soil
- Julie Doucet: Creator Dirty Plotte
- Sarah Dyer
- Mary Fleener
- Shary Flenniken: Creator Trots and Bonnie
- Ellen Forney
- Shaenon Garrity: Creator, Narbonic webcomic
- Melinda Gebbie: Artist, Lost Girls (Top Shelf Productions)
- Phoebe Gloeckner: Creator A Child's Life and The Diary of a Teenage Girl
- Roberta Gregory: Creator Naughty Bits (Fantagraphics)
- G.B. Jones
- Megan Kelso: Writer/artist, Artichoke Tales (Fantagraphics)
- Aline Kominsky-Crumb: Creator The Bunch
- Carol Lay
- Hope Larson : Gray Horses and Salamander Dream
- Vanesa Littlecrow: Creator, Nine Lives of Catnose
- Carla Speed McNeil: Writer/artist, Finder
- Diane Noomin: Creator DiDi Glitz
- Christine Norrie: Artist, Hopeless Savages (Oni Press)
- Liz Prince : Will You Still Love Me If I Wet the Bed
- Trina Robbins: Writer-artist, Ms. Tree (Eclipse Comics)
- Ariel Schrag: Creator, Awkward (Slave Labor Graphics)
- Dori Seda: 1980s underground satirist
- Terrie Smith: Artist, Chester Ringtail
- Tara Tallan: Creator & writer-artist Galaxion (Helikon Comics)
- Raina Telgemeier: Writer/artist, Smile (A Dental Drama)
- Carol Tyler: Cartoonist; books include The Job Thing (Fantagraphics, 1993) ISBN 1-56097-111-8
- Serena Valentino: Writer, Slave Labor Graphics' Gloom Cookie
- Penny Van Horn: Cartoonist; book Recipe for Disaster and Other Stories (Fantagraphics, 1999) ISBN 1-56097-330-7
- Sara Varon: Writer/artist, Sweaterweather (Alternative Comics)
- Lauren Weinstein: Writer/artist The Goddess of War
- Kate Worley: Creator, Omaha the Cat Dancer
- catherine yronwode: Editor-in-chief of Eclipse Comics
- Jess Fink: Creator Chester 5000
American comic strips
Japanese manga
- Akira Amano
- Yuki Amemiya: Creator of 07-Ghost together with Yukino Ichihara
- Yasuko Aoike
- Kiyoko Arai: Creator: Angel Lip, Ask Dr. Rin!
- Hiromu Arakawa: Creator/artist/writer "Fullmetal Alchemist"
- Sakura Asagi
- Hinako Ashihara: Creator of Sand Chronicles
- Izumi Aso
- Clamp: Creators RG Veda, Magic Knight Rayearth, Cardcaptor Sakura, Angelic Layer, Chobits, Tsubasa: Reservoir Chronicle, xxxHolic
- Nariko Enomoto
- Kazuko Fujita: Creator of Makoto Call!, Four Steps to Romance
- Cocoa Fujiwara: Creator of dear, Inu x Boku SS
- Hiro Fujiwara
- Moto Hagio
- Nanae Haruno
- Bisco Hatori
- Akiko Higashimura: Creator Kisekae Yuka-chan, Himawari - Kenichi Legend, Mama ha Temparish
- Asa Higuchi: Creator of Big Windup!
- Matsuri Hino: Creator: Vampire Knight
- Yumi Hotta: Writer of Hikaru no Go
- Yukari Ichijo
- Yumiko Igarashi
- Riyoko Ikeda: Creator The Rose of Versailles
- Ryo Ikuemi: Creator of Bara-Iro no Ashita, Kiyoku Yawaku
- Risa Itō: Creator of Oi Pītan!!, Oruchuban Ebichu
- Natsumi Itsuki
- Mariko Iwadate
- Kaneyoshi Izumi: Creator: Sonnanja neyo
- Yuna Kagesaki: Creator of Chibi Vampire
- Junko Karube
- Yumiko Kawahara
- Mizuki Kawashita: Creator of Strawberry 100%, First Love Limited, Anedoki
- Toshie Kihara
- Miyuki Kobayashi
- Yun Kōga
- Erika Kurahashi: Creator Seikimatsu no Angel, Max Lovely!
- Fusako Kuramochi
- Yuki Kure
- Miyako Maki
- Temari Matsumoto: Art, Kyo Kara Maoh! Creator of Just My Luck, The Loudest Whisper: Uwasa No Futari, Shinobu Kokoro: Hidden Heart, Cause of My Teacher
- Akemi Matsunae
- Suzue Miuchi
- Kyoko Mizuki: Writer: Candy Candy
- Hideko Mizuno: Creator of Fire!, Honey Honey no Suteki na Bouken
- Junko Mizuno: Creator/artist/writer "Pure Trance" among many other notable works
- Milk Morinaga: Creator of Kuchibiru Tameiki Sakurairo, Girl Friends
- Milk Morizono
- Maki Murakami
- Mayumi Muroyama
- Aya Nakahara: Creator of Love Com
- Kiriko Nananan: Creator of blue, strawberry shortcakes
- Tomoko Ninomiya
- Keiko Nishi: Creator of Sanban-chō Hagiwara-ya no Bijin, Love Song
- Miho Obana: Creator Kodomo no Omocha
- Akane Ogura: Creator Zettai Heiwa Daisakusen
- Saori Oguri: Creator of Is He Turning Japanese?
- Reiko Okano: Creator of Fancy Dance
- Hiromu Ono: Creator Lady Love
- Minami Ozaki
- Mari Ozawa
- Peach-Pit
- Marimo Ragawa: Creator Baby and Me
- Akizuki Risu
- Fumi Saimon
- Momoko Sakura: Creator Chibi Maruko-chan
- Kanoko Sakurakoji: Creator of Backstage Prince, Black Bird
- Erica Sakurazawa
- Machiko Satonaka
- Reiko Shimizu
- Takako Shimura: Creator of Aoi Hana, Wandering Son
- Fuyumi Soryo
- Hinako Sugiura
- Julietta Suzuki
- Haruko Tachiiri
- Megumi Tachikawa
- Kaoru Tada
- Rumiko Takahashi: Creator Urusei Yatsura, Ranma ½, Inu Yasha
- Natsuki Takaya
- Naoko Takeuchi: Creator Sailor Moon
- Yumi Tamura: Creator of Basara, Chicago, 7 Seeds
- Yellow Tanabe: Creator of Kekkaishi
- Ema Tōyama: Creator Pixie Pop, Koko ni iru yo!
- Miwa Ueda: Creator Peach Girl
- Kimiko Uehara
- Chica Umino: Creator Honey and Clover, March Comes in Like a Lion
- Yuki Urushibara: Creator of Mushishi
- Masako Watanabe
- Yuu Watase: Creator of Fushigi Yūgi, Ceres, Celestial Legend, Absolute Boyfriend
- Murasaki Yamada
- Ryoko Yamagishi
- Ebine Yamaji
- Sumika Yamamoto
- Kazumi Yamashita: Creator of The Life of Genius Professor Yanagizawa
- Waki Yamato
- Ai Yazawa
- Akimi Yoshida
- Fumi Yoshinaga: Creator Antique Bakery, Ōoku: The Inner Chambers
- Wataru Yoshizumi: Creator of Handsome na Kanojo, Marmalade Boy, Ultra Maniac
- Kaori Yuki: Creator of Earl Cain, Angel Sanctuary
Others
See also
References
- ^ Paley, Nina. "Nina Gives Up", Nina's Adventures. Reprinted in Robbins, Trina. A Century of Women Cartoonists, Northampton, MA: Kitchen Sink Press, 1993. pp. 172
- ^ "Women would submit things to the underground publishers and they'd be rejected because men were grossed out by what women had to say." Flenniken, Shary, as quoted in the DVD insert of Comic Book Confidential (dir. Ron Mann, 1989)
- ^ a b Grace Drayton at the Lambiek Comiclopedia
- ^ Lily Renée at the Lambiek Comiclopedia
- ^ Fran Hopper at the Lambiek Comiclopedia
- ^ RoseONeil.org (Bonniebrook Historical Society official site)
- ^ Jerry Bails' "Who's Who of American Comic Books 1928-1999: Bernard Baily Studio
- ^ Sometimes spelled "Rae Herman", though artist Mort Leav was cited in Alter Ego #60 (July 2006), p. 54, as recalling her first name spelled "Ray".
- ^ Ibid., interview with artist Tony DiPreta, who said her next company after Holyoke might have been Orbit, based in Columbus Circle in Manhattan.
- ^ a b Hajdu, David. The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How it Changed America, page 5. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2008. ISBN 0-374-18767-3; ISBN 978-0-374-18767-5.
- ^ "We Didn't Know it was the Golden Age" (column), by Marc Swayze: Alter Ego #5 (Summer 2000), pp. 40-41
- ^ Credits Page, I Hate Gallant Girl #1 (November 2008), Image Comics
- ^ Credits Page, Rogue Angel: Teller of Tall Tales #1 (February 2008), IDW Publishing
- ^ Credits Page, I Was Kidnapped by Lesbian Pirates from Outer Space #1 (May 2008), Platinum Studios
- ^ Credits Page, Dark Ivory #1 (March 2008), (Image Comics)
- ^ Credits Page, The Voyages of The SheBuccaneer #1 (2008), Great Big Comics
- ^ Credits Page, The Dreamer #1 (October 2008), IDW Publishing
- ^ Credits Page, Grimm Fairy Tales #25 (March 2008), Zenescope Entertainment
- ^ Credits Page, Jughead's Double Digest #139 (June 2008), Archie Comic Publications
- ^ "Flash in the Pan", Teen Titans Year One #4 (June 2008), DC Comics
External links
Further reading
- Horn, Maurice. Women in the Comics (Chelsea House; New York, London; 1977) ISBN 0-87754-056-X; (trade paperback) ISBN o-97754-205-8
- Robbins, Trina. A Century of Women Cartoonists (Kitchen Sink, 1993) ISBN 0-87816-206-2
- Robbins, Trina. From Girls to Grrrlz: A History of Women’s Comics from Teens to Zines (Chronicle, 1999) ISBN 0-8118-2199-4
- Robbins, Trina. The Great Women Cartoonists (Watson-Guptill, 2001) ISBN 0-8230-2170-X
- Yronwode, Catherine and Robbins, Trina. Women and the Comics (Eclipse, 1983) ISBN 0-913035-01-7