Geoff Campion

Geoff Campion
Born Arthur Geoffrey Campion
(1916-11-19)19 November 1916
Coventry, Warwickshire, England
Died 18 December 1997(1997-12-18) (aged 81)
Sedgemoor, Somerset, England
Nationality United Kingdom
Occupation Artist
Known for Adventure strips
Cover of Battle Picture Weekly, featuring "D-Day Dawson", 1975

Arthur Geoffrey Campion (b. Coventry, 19 November 1916, d. 18 December 1997)[1] was a British comics artist who drew adventure strips for Amalgamated Press/IPC.

He started out as a tax inspector. As a staff officer in the East India Command in WWII he began drawing cartoons for the forces' magazine, Jambo. Returning to England, he responded to an ad from the Amalgamated Press looking for artists in 1948.[2] He was hired by editor Leonard Matthews to draw humour strips like "Professor Bloop" in Knock-Out,[3] and filled in on a variety of strips for AP artist Hugh McNeill, including a Thunderbolt Jaxon comic for publication in Australia in 1949.[4]

Matthews then recruited him to draw westerns for Cowboy Comics Library - when Campion protested he couldn't draw horses, Matthews replied "Bloody well learn then!".[3] He established himself as one of AP/Fleetway's leading adventure artists, working for titles like The Comet and Sun as well as Knock-Out. Aside from westerns, like "Strongbow the Mohawk", "Buffalo Bill" and "Billy the Kid", he drew WWII aviation strip "Battler Britton", historical strips like "Dick Turpin", a highwaywoman strip, "Black Velvet", for Poppet, and adaptations of Quo Vadis and Last of the Mohicans. He also drew "Tales of the Gold Monkey" and "The Cyclone King" for TV Comic, and for Eagle, Playhour and Look and Learn.[2][3]

Over the course of the 1950s and 60s his style became the "house style" for AP/Fleetway adventure artists. In the 1960s he worked for Lion, drawing "Captain Condor", "Typhoon Tracy" and "The Spellbinder", and Valiant, drawing "Captain Hurricane".[2][3] In the 1970s he worked for Battle Picture Weekly, drawing "D-Day Dawson",[5] "The Eagle",[6] "Fighter from the Sky",[7] "Sergeant Without Stripes"[8] and "Action Force".[9]

In 1988, he drew large tableau boards for the National Trust, illustrating the history of The Needles old Battery on the Isle of Wight, which remain on display there.

References

  1. Norman Wright and David Ashford, Masters of Fun and Thrills: The British Comic Artists Vol. 1, Norman Wright (pub.), 2008, pp. 7-21
  2. 1 2 3 Geoff Campion on Lambiek Comiclopedia
  3. 1 2 3 4 Geoff Campion bio at the Book Palace
  4. Steve Holland, Geoff Campion, Bear Alley, 1 August 2007
  5. D-Day Dawson at Captain Hurricane's Best of Battle
  6. The Eagle at Captain Hurricane's Best of Battle
  7. David Bishop, "Blazing Battle Action part 1", Judge Dredd Megazine #209, 26 August 2003
  8. Sergeant Without Stripes at Captain Hurricane's Best of Battle
  9. Action Force at Captain Hurricane's Best of Battle
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