Michael Bair
Michael Bair | |
---|---|
Born |
Michael A. Hernandez[1] c. 1938/1939 |
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Penciller, Inker |
Notable works |
Penciler: Inker: |
Michael A. Hernandez is an American comic book artist (who is better known as Michael Bair), best known for his work as an inker. His work includes Marvel Comics' Alpha Flight, and DC Comics' Hawkman. He is best known for inking Rags Morales' pencils since 2002, most notably on the high-profile miniseries Identity Crisis.
Biography
Bair started his career in the early 1980s, pencilling a "Stormy Tempest" story in Star*Fems #2 for AC/Paragon Publications in 1982.[2] In 1983, he began working for the leading American comic book publishers, DC and Marvel Comics.[2] Bair's first work for "DC was the 'Huntress' backup in 'Wonder Woman' and then 'JSA Vs America,'" all of which work, he recalls, "was pencilling."[1] He also produced a range of penciled & inked covers for the company over the following ten years; for Marvel he provided brief pencil work for Moon Knight, but focused on non-Marvel work until the mid- to late-1980s.[2]
Between 1984 and 1985, Bair also produced work for Eclipse Comics, producing covers and interior pencils for Aztec Ace, pencils & inks for Crimson Dawn and backup features for Sabre.[2]
For these few early years of his career, Bair says he "used my legal name which is Michael Hernandez. I chose to change to Bair because it's my mother's maiden name and you have to understand, there are a lot of Hernandez's in comics- I've even got chided over it [laughs]. It was simple to go with Bair — there are no other Bairs in comics — though I did get a call from Mike Barr over it [laughs]."[1]
Pencils
DC Comics
Bair's major work in the 1980s, however, was providing interior pencils (and often inks) for DC Comics. In particular, he had a long run working on a number of Golden Age-connected characters with Roy Thomas. Three years penciling Infinity, Inc. gave way to some of his most notable works, co-creating the Young All-Stars and Young Allies in the pages of Young All-Stars with Thomas (and Thomas' wife Dann Thomas).[2]
His pencils graced the pages of Firestorm, and his inks appeared in Captain Atom in the late 1980s, during which time he also inked the Catwoman mini-series written by Mindy Newell.[2] Bair also contributed work to DC's guidebook titles, including Secret Origins and Who's Who in the DC Universe between 1985 and 1989.[2]
Marvel Comics
Between 1987 and 1995, Bair also produced a number of covers for Marvel Comics, pencilling, inking and occasionally painting several.[2] Producing most of his Marvel work during the early 1990s, Bair provided the art for a story in the 1990 Daredevil Annual, causing writer Gregory White to remark "I don't think that story could have worked at all if it weren't for the terrific artwork of Michael Bair".[3] Bair then pencilled Alpha Flight for a year, and provided pencils to issues of comics featuring a veritable who's who of Marvel Comics - Nick Fury, the X-Men, Avengers, Thor and the Punisher.[2]
He contributed pencils and inks to the Wild Cards anthology for Epic Comics, before - circa 1991 - switching mostly to inking duties, including on the title Sleepwalker, and a couple of issues of What if...?.[2] He also produced both pencils and inks in the first five issues of the Hellstorm series in 1993.[2]
Other
Around 1994, Bair ceased his association with the 'big two,' in favor of upstart company Valiant/Acclaim, pencilling and inking issues and covers for X-O Manowar, Bloodshot and Blood and Roses, among others.
Inks
Bair recalled in 2004 that, "[t]he first ten years of my career was all pencilling — I didn't know how to ink".[1] Having, early in his career, shown samples to Jim Shooter (then Marvel's Editor-in-chief), Bair recalled nearly twenty years later that Shooter "said, 'Those pencils look pretty good', and then when I showed him my inking, he said, 'But stay away from the inks'".[1]
These comments, he says, "felt like a personal challenge, so on my own I worked on my inks and creators like Mark Texeira, who I worked with in the past, strongly influenced how I approached inking. The more I learned about inks, the more I wanted to ink my own work — there's a reason why you don't see too many people pencilling and inking their own work — it's just too much to do on a monthly schedule".[1] The time-consuming nature of this led Bair to largely move away from penciling in favor of inking the pencils of others.
During the mid-1990s, Bair inked David W. Mack at Caliber Press and William Tucci at Crusade Entertainment on their respective comics: Kabuki and Shi. After working for various smaller publishers, Bair penciled and inked a couple of comics for Harris Comics' Vampirella.[2]
Back to DC
In mid-1997, Bair began producing new work for DC Comics, cementing his almost-exclusive switch from pencils to inks with the miniseries The Kents (over pencils by Timothy Truman) and half of JLA: Year One (alongside series artist Barry Kitson). He inked most of the first two years of the new James Robinson/David Goyer-penned JSA revival over pencils by regular-series artist Steve Sadowski. Bair ultimately signed an exclusive contract with DC.[2][4]
In 2002, Bair inked covers by Tom Grummett for The Power Company, before first teaming with penciller Rags Morales on Geoff Johns and James Robinson's Hawkman relaunch.[5] Morales said "when I saw the magic that Michael Bair added to my work, I knew I had to stick with this dude".[6] Johns called Morales and Bair "the most underrated art team in the business... Their work is majestic, detailed and kinetic".[7] Johns also compared his artistic collaborators to the stars of the book, saying "there are four stars to this book. Hawkman, Hawkgirl, Rags Morales and Michael Bair... Michael Bair and Rags together make you feel every punch and smash in the series, but at the same time convey the utter beauty of Hawkgirl, who's graceful but is also very vicious."[8]
Bair continued to ink Morales' pencils on Identity Crisis (2004–2005), the first major Crisis, since Crisis on Infinite Earths,[1] and a couple of fill-in issues of Wonder Woman with writer Greg Rucka.
He later inked issues in Grant Morrison's Seven Soldiers event, including two covers (and one interior; Serge LaPointe inked the rest) of the Bulleteer miniseries with penciler Yanick Paquette. In addition to his continued work with Morales (including a two-issue story in the JSA: Classified series), Bair has co-inked Dave Gibbons' pencils in the Gibbons-penned Green Lantern Corps series, and on the cover of the Rann-Thanagar War: Infinite Crisis Special (Apr, 2006), in which he also provided some interior inks.
As of 2007, Bair is inking Morales' pencils on Peter Tomasi's run on Nightwing.[9]
Influence
In a tour of his studio, artist Simone Bianchi highlighted a photograph, explaining "it is a photo of myself and Mike Bair that was taken in New York in Summer 2004: that was a very important moment in my career and I owe a lot to this great artist and friend so I like having it in my studio."[10]
Awards
Identity Crisis was selected by the Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA)'s 2007 recommended list of Great Graphic Novels For Teens[11] and was nominated for the 2005 "Best Single Issue or Story" Harvey Award.[12]
Bibliography
Interior comics work includes:
- "When You Wish Upon A...?" (pencils as Michael A. Hernandez, with writer/inker Bill Black, in Star*Fems #2, AC[13]/Paragon Publications,[2] 1982)
- "Fly the Friendly Skies" (pencils as Michael A. Hernandez, with writer Steve Ringgenberg and inks by Kevin Dzuban, back-up story in Moon Knight #31, May 1983)
- Huntress (pencils as Michael A. Hernandez, with writer Joey Cavalieri, back-up stories in Wonder Woman, DC Comics):
- "Straitjacket!" (inks by Rick J Bryant, in Wonder Woman #305, July 1983)
- "It's...Madness" (inks by Rick J Bryant, in Wonder Woman #306, August 1983)
- "Side Effects" (inks by Frank Giacoia, in Wonder Woman #307, September 1983)
- "Pressure" (inks by Frank Giacoia, in Wonder Woman #308, October 1983)
- Aztec Ace (as Michael A. Hernandez, with writer Doug Moench, Eclipse Comics):
- "The Mexica Serpent" (pencils, with inks by Nestor Redondo, in Aztec Ace #1, March 1984)
- "Lightning Snatched From the Tyrant of Time" (pencils, with inks by Nestor Redondo, in Aztec Ace #2, April 1984)
- "Picnics at Midnight" (breakdowns, with pencil finishes & inks by Ron Harris, in Aztec Ace #9, January 1985)
- Secret Origins (with writer Roy Thomas, DC Comics):
- "The Secret Origin of the Golden Age Sandman" (pencils, with co-author Dann Thomas and inks by Steve Montano in Secret Origins #7, 1986)
- "The Secret Origin of the Golden Age Hourman" (pencils, with co-author Dann Thomas and inks by Michael Gustovich in Secret Origins #16, 1987)
- "The Secret Origin of Dr. Fate" (pencils, with inks by Bob Downs in Secret Origins #24, 1988)
- "The Secret Origin of The Justice Society of America" (pencils, with inks by Bob Downs in Secret Origins #31, 1988)
- "The Secret Origin of Grim Ghost" (pencils/inks, in Secret Origins #42, 1989)
- Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe (pencils/inks, with various, DC Comics):
- "Sandman I" (in Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe #XX, October 1986)
- "Zyklon" (in Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe #XXVI, April 1987)
- All-Star Squadron #63 (pencils, with writer Roy Thomas and inks by Mike Machlan, DC Comics, November 1986)
- Who's Who in Star Trek #1-2 (pencils/inks, with writer Allan Asherman, DC Comics):
- "Nurse Chapel" (in Who's Who in Star Trek #1, March 1987)
- "Deltans" (in Who's Who in Star Trek #1, March 1987)
- "Miramanee" (in Who's Who in Star Trek #2, April 1987)
- "Natira" (in Who's Who in Star Trek #2, April 1987)
- Nightmask #7 (pencils, with writers Roy Thomas/Dann Thomas and inks by Pablo Marcos, Marvel Comics, May 1987)
- Infinity, Inc. #39, 50-53, Annual #1 (pencils, with writers Roy Thomas/Dann Thomas and inks by Bob Downs, DC Comics, 1987–1988)
- Young All-Stars (with writers Roy Thomas/Dann Thomas, DC Comics)
- Young All-Stars #1, 6, 11-12, and 31, (pencils, 1987–1989)
- Young All-Stars #16-22 Annual #1 (pencils/inks, 1988–1989)
- Young All-Stars #31 (pencils; pin-up pencils/inks, November 1989)
- Catwoman (inks, with writer Mindy Newell and pencils by J. J. Birch, 4-issue mini-series, DC Comics, 1989)
- Green Arrow #25-26 (inks, with writer Mike Grell and pencils by J. J. Birch, DC Comics, 1989)
- Daredevil: "Two Schizos" (pencils/inks, with writer Gregory White, in Daredevil Annual 1, Marvel Comics, 1990)
- Alpha Flight #87-91, 93-95, 97-100 (pencils, with Fabian Nicieza and inks by Mike Manley and Chris Ivy, Marvel Comics, 1990–1991)
- Sleepwalker #5, 7, 11-12 (inks, with writer Bob Budiansky, and pencils by Bret Blevins (#5, 7, 11) and Joe Quesada (#12), Marvel Comics, 1991–1992)
- Hellstorm: Prince of Lies #1-5 (pencils/inks, with writer Rafael Nieves, Marvel Comics, 1993)
- Shi (Crusade Comics):
- The Way of the Warrior #2-8 (inks, with writers Peter Gutierrez/William Tucci and pencils by William Tucci, 1994)
- Senryaku #1 (pencils, with writer Gary Cohn, 1995)
- Cynder (Immortelle Studios):
- Cynder #1-3 (1995)
- Cynder II #1 (1996)
- Cynder Annual #1 (May 1996)
- Kabuki (Caliber Comics, reprinted in Kabuki Classics):
- Circle of Blood (inks, with script and pencils by David W. Mack, 1995)
- Masks of the Noh #3 (pencils/inks, with writer David W. Mack, 1996)
- Tomoe #1 (inks, with writers Peter Gutierrez/William Tucci and pencils by William Tucci, Crusade Comics, 1996)
- Vampirella:
- "The Blood Red Game" (pencils/inks, with writer Grant Morrison, in Vampirella: 25th Anniversary Special, Harris Comics, 1996)
- Vampirella vs Hemorrhage (pencils/inks, with writers Ian Edginton/Thomas E. Sniegoski, 3-issue mini-series, Harris Comics, 1997)
- "Vampirella/Lady Death" (inks, with writer David Conway and pencils by Louis Small Jr., one-shot, Chaos Comics, 1999)
- The Kents #1-8 (inks, with writer John Ostrander and pencils by Timothy Truman, DC Comics, 1997–1998, tpb, 272 pages, 2000, ISBN 1-56389-513-7)
- JLA: Year One #4-6, 9, 10, 12 (inks, with Brian Augustyn/Mark Waid and pencils by Barry Kitson, DC Comics, 1998)
- JSA (with writers David Goyer/James Robinson, DC Comics)
- JSA #1-5, 7-10 (inks, with pencils by Steve Sadowski (#5 pencils by Derek Aucoin), DC Comics, 1999–2000)
- JSA #11 (breakdowns/inks, with pencil finishes by Buzz, June 2000)
- JSA #13-20 (inks (#19 with co-inker Keith Champagne), with pencils by Steve Sadowski, DC Comics, 2000–2001)
- JSA #22-27 (inks, with pencils by Steve Sadowski & Rags Morales, DC Comics, 2001)
- Hawkman #1-12, 15-17, 20-23, 25 (inks, with writers Geoff Johns/James Robinson and pencils by Rags Morales, DC Comics, 2003–2004)
- Identity Crisis (inks, with writer Brad Meltzer and pencils by Rags Morales, 7-issue limited series DC Comics, 2004–2005)
- Wonder Woman #215, 217, 221, 223 (inks, with Greg Rucka and pencils by Rags Morales, DC Comics, 2005–2006)
- Seven Soldiers (all with writer Grant Morrison)
- Bulleteer #1 (inks, with Yanick Paquette, DC Comics, January 2006)
- Mister Miracle #2 (inks, with pencils by Billy Dallas Patton, DC Comics, February 2006)
- Green Lantern Corps #4-5 (inks, with script and pencils by Dave Gibbons, DC Comics, 2006)
- JSA: Classified #19-20 (inks, with writer Scott Beatty and pencils by Rags Morales, DC Comics, 2007)
- The Origin of the Justice Society of America" (inks, with writer Mark Waid and pencils by Don Kramer, in 52, DC Comics, 2007)
- Nightwing #140-145, 148 (inks, with Peter Tomasi and pencils by Rags Morales, DC Comics, 2008)
- Captain Britain and MI: 13 #7-8 (inks, with writer Paul Cornell and pencils by Leonard Kirk, Marvel Comics, 2009)
Covers
Cover work includes:
- Nightmask #5, 7 (Marvel Comics, Mar/May 1987)
- JSA #45-47 (pencils/inks, DC Comics, April–June 2000)
- Seven Soldiers: Bulleteer #1, 4 (inks, with pencils by Yanick Paquette, DC Comics, Jan/May 2006)
- Nightwing #140-143 (inks, with pencils by Rags Morales, DC Comics, 2008)
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Bair-ing His Identity: Michael Bair talks 'Identity Crisis' and More, Comic Book Resources, March 5, 2004
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 Who's Who of American Comics: 1928 - 1999 by Bails, Jerry G. and Ware, Hames. Accessed October 2, 2008
- ↑ Interview with Gregory White, Man Without Fear, March 1998
- ↑ Michael Bair Re-ups with DC For Another Year (press release), Newsarama, December 15, 2004
- ↑ Hawkman #1 (May 2002) at the Comic Book DB. Accessed October 4, 2008
- ↑ Rags To Riches: Morales Talks 'Hawkman', Comic Book Resources, November 12, 2002
- ↑ Geoff Johns interview, Newsarama
- ↑ What Is Love?: Geoff Johns talks 'Hawkman', Comic Book Resources, October 18, 2002
- ↑ Strange How the Night Moves: Tomasi talks "Nightwing", Comic Book Resources, October 16, 2007
- ↑ Weiland, Jonah; "Studio Tours: Artist Simone Bianchi", Comic Book Resources, January 10, 2007
- ↑ "YALSA 2007 Great Graphic Novels". ICv2. Retrieved 2008-04-27.
- ↑ 2005 Harvey Award Nominees and Winners
- ↑ The Grand Comics Database Project: Star*Fems #2 (1982). Accessed October 4, 2008
References
- Michael Bair at the Grand Comics Database
- Michael Bair at the Comic Book DB
- Michael Bair at the Big Comic Book DataBase
External links
- Michael Bair on Myspace
- Michael Bair at deviantArt
- Michael Bair at Comic Art Fans
- Michael Bair at big WOW! art.com
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