Paolo Rivera
Paolo Rivera | |
---|---|
Rivera at the November 2008 Big Apple Convention in Manhattan. | |
Born |
Paolo Manuel Rivera 1981 Daytona Beach, Florida |
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Penciller, Inker |
Notable works | Mythos, Daredevil |
paolorivera |
Paolo Rivera is an Eisner Award-winning American comic book artist. He is known for illustrating the Mythos series of one-shots and several issues of Spider-Man as well as his recent collaboration with writer Mark Waid, his father/inker Joe Rivera and colorist Javier Rodríguez on Daredevil. Although gaining acclaim and recognition through his early fully painted works, he has since moved on to more traditional comics process of pencilling, inking, and coloring (with some occasional sculpting).[1][2]
Early life
Rivera was born and raised in Daytona Beach, Florida. He was the valedictorian of Mainland High School class of 1999, and graduated from Rhode Island School of Design with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 2003. While at RISD, he studied under comic book artist and writer David Mazzucchelli and spent his junior year studying in Rome.[3]
Career
By his senior year at RISD, Rivera was already creating covers and pin-ups for writer Jim Krueger, whom he had previously met at MegaCon in Orlando, Florida while still in high school.[3] Together they worked on a number of personal projects and pitches including Children of the Left Hand (the story of Mary-Shelly, which presented a younger take on Frankenstein’s Monster; 2 covers, 6 pages of interior art and 1 poster were completed) and various other covers and pin-ups none of which were ultimately released.[4]
Thanks in part to Krueger, Rivera began to work for Marvel Comics in 2002. His first interior work was an 11-page painted Dr. Doom story in Marvel Double Shot #2. Since then Rivera has worked primarily for Marvel, even signing an exclusive contract in 2008.[2][5]
Upon the expiration of the contract and after ten years of almost exclusive work for Marvel, Rivera announced his departure from the company.
“ | So why am I leaving? The short answer: ownership. With the exception of just a few published pieces of art (which belong to other companies), Marvel owns the copyrights to my entire professional portfolio. And why shouldn't they? I was, of course, compensated fairly for it, and for that I’m grateful — but the sum total of that work is not enough to support me in the distant future. My page rate is essentially the same as when I started at 21, so I've decided to invest in myself. What I create in the next decade needs to pay dividends when my vision gets blurry and my hands start to shake (and who knows what else). Now is the time to make that choice, while I’m still young, possess "great power," but have few responsibilities.[6] | ” |
Among his upcoming projects are The Valiant, a millennia-spanning event for the revived Valiant Entertainment[7] and a yet-unnamed sci-fi graphic novel for 2016.[6]
Bibliography
Interior comic work includes:
- Marvel Double Shot #2: "Masks" (with Christopher Priest, anthology, Marvel, 2003)
- The Spectacular Spider-Man #14 (with Paul Jenkins, Marvel, 2004)
- Mythos (with Paul Jenkins, one-shots, Marvel):
- X-Men (2006)
- Hulk (2006)
- Ghost Rider (2007)
- Spider-Man (2007)
- Fantastic Four (2007)
- Captain America (2008)
- The Amazing Spider-Man (Marvel):
- "Birthday Boy" (with Zeb Wells, in Extra! #2, 2009)
- "Old Huntin' Buddies" (with Zeb Wells, in #577, 2009)
- "One Moment in Time" (with Joe Quesada, in #638-641, 2010)
- Daredevil v3 #1-3, 7, 9-10 (with Mark Waid and Marcos Martín, Marvel, 2011–2012)
- Batman: Black and White v2 #5: "Hell Night" (with Ivan Brandon, anthology, DC Comics, 2014)
- The Valiant #1-4 (with Matt Kindt and Jeff Lemire, Valiant, 2014–2015)
- Little Nemo: Dream Another Dream: "Escape from Slumberland" (script and art, anthology graphic novel, Locust Moon, 2014)
- Howard the Duck v4 #5: "Final Big Super Hero Battle" (with Joe Rivera — inks on Joe Quinones, written by Chip Zdarsky, Marvel, 2015)
Covers only
- Iron Man #63 (Marvel, 2003)
- Captain America: What Price Glory? #4 (Marvel, 2003)
- Fantastic Four #500 (Marvel, 2003)
- Hawkeye #1 (Marvel, 2003)
- Silver Surfer #6, 9, 14 (Marvel, 2004)
- Sabretooth #1-4 (Marvel, 2004–2005)
- Army of Darkness: Shop till You Drop Dead #1 (Devil's Due, 2005)
- Red Sonja #1 (Dynamite, 2005)
- Books of Doom #1-6 (Marvel, 2006)
- Marvel Illustrated: The Iliad #1-8 (Marvel, 2008)
- The Twelve #5-12, Spearhead (Marvel, 2008–2012)
- Ms. Marvel #38, 41 (Marvel, 2009)
- The Amazing Spider-Man #590, 592, 615-617, 646, 665, 698-700 (Marvel, 2009–2013)
- Marvel Mystery Comics 70th Anniversary Special #1 (Marvel, 2009)
- Young Allies Comics 70th Anniversary Special #1 (Marvel, 2009)
- Wolverine: Old Man Logan Giant-Size #1 (Marvel, 2009)
- Daredevil v1 #505-507 (Marvel, 2010)
- X-Men v3 #7 (Marvel, 2011)
- The Spectacular Spider-Man #1000 (Marvel, 2011)
- Wolverine #5.1 (Marvel, 2011)
- X-Men: Legacy #245 (Marvel, 2011)
- Captain America: First Vengeance #1 (Marvel, 2011)
- Fear Itself #1 (Marvel, 2011)
- Avengers v4 #20, 34 (Marvel, 2012–2013)
- Daredevil v3 #8, 12, 14-15, 18-22, 26 (Marvel, 2012–2013)
- Captain Marvel #1 (Marvel, 2012)
- AVX: Consequences #1 (Marvel, 2012)
- Wolverine MAX #1 (Marvel, 2012)
- All-New X-Men #1 (Marvel, 2013)
- Captain America #1 (Marvel, 2013)
- Two Past Midnight #1-3 (Dark Horse, 2013)
- Avenging Spider-Man #15.1, 16-17, 19-22 (Marvel, 2013)
- The Green Hornet #1-13 (Dynamite, 2013–2014)
- X-O Manowar #11 (Valiant, 2013)
- Avengers v5 #5, 34 (Marvel, 2013–2014)
- Action Comics v2 #18 (DC Comics, 2013)
- The Shadow #13 (Dynamite, 2013)
- X #1 (Dark Horse, 2013)
- Guardians of the Galaxy #2, 5-7 (Marvel, 2013)
- Captain Midnight #1 (Dark Horse, 2013)
- Hawkeye #10 (Marvel, 2013)
- Age of Ultron #10.AI (Marvel, 2013)
- Indestructible Hulk #9-10 (Marvel, 2013)
- Superior Spider-Man Team-Up #1-9, 11-12 (Marvel, 2013–2014)
- The Occultist #1 (Dark Horse, 2013)
- Five Ghosts #7 (Image, 2013)
- Unity #1 (Valiant, 2013)
- Ghost #1 (Dark Horse, 2013)
- Marvel Knights: X-Men #1 (Marvel, 2014)
- Blackout #1 (Dark Horse, 2014)
- Miracleman #3 (Marvel, 2014)
- Magneto #1 (Marvel, 2014)
- Daredevil v4 #1, 1.50 (Marvel, 2014)
- Elektra #1 (Marvel, 2014)
- Rai #2 (Valiant, 2014)
- Kick-Ass 3 #7 (Icon, 2014)
- Original Sin #0 (Marvel, 2014)
- New Avengers v2 #17 (Marvel, 2014)
- Batman v2 #33 (DC Comics, 2014)
- The Delinquents #1-4 (Valiant, 2014)
- God Hates Astronauts #4 (Image, 2014)
- Marvel 75th Anniversary Celebration #1 (Marvel, 2014)
- Batman: Arkham Knight #3 (DC Comics, 2015)
- Sons of the Devil #1 (Image, 2015)
- Book of Death #1-4 (Valiant, 2015)
- Archie #2 (Archie Comics, 2015)
- Горелово gn (Комильфо, 2015)
Awards
- 2012 Eisner Award, Best Single Issue (or One-Shot), for Daredevil #7 (shared with Mark Waid, Marcos Martín and his father/inker, Joe Rivera)[8]
- 2012 Eisner Award, Best Continuing Series, for Daredevil (shared with Mark Waid, Marcos Martín and his father/inker, Joe Rivera)[8]
- 2012 Harvey Award, Best New Series, for Daredevil
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paolo Rivera. |
- ↑ Rivera, Paolo (August 19, 2013). "Red Sonja Sculpture". The Self-Absorbing Man.
- 1 2 Renaud, Jeffrey (August 15, 2008). "Rivera to Draw "Amazing Spider-Man"". CBR.
- 1 2 Paccia, David (November 9, 2011). "Cartoonist Surey #248: Paolo Rivera". DAVID WASTING PAPER.
- ↑ "Repped Artists: Paolo Rivera" Splash Page Comic Art.
- ↑ Smith, Nathan (July 26, 2008). "SDCC '08: Paolo Rivera Goes Exclusive". Marvel.com.
- 1 2 Rivera, Paolo (June 18, 2012). "End of an Era". The Self-Absorbing Man.
- ↑ Valiant Voice, The (July 11, 2014). "Jeff Lemire, Matt Kindt, and Paolo Rivera Join THE VALIANT". Valiant Entertainment.
- 1 2 "Henson Tale of Sand and Daredevil Big Winners at 2012 Eisner Awards". Comic-Con.org. July 2012. Retrieved October 3, 2012.
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