First Prog: 1088
Final Prog: 1397
First Meg: 3.61
(aka 164)
Final Meg: 243
Total appearances: 92
-including the episodes of
Metro Dredd that were reprinted in the Megazine, but not the ones that weren’t.
Creator Credits:
Snow/Tiger
Thirteen, or, if you will, Th1rt3en
Art credits:
Judge Dredd
Rose O’Rion
Sinister Dexter
Nikolai Dante
Shimura
a handful of one-offs
Notable character creations:
Kal Cutter
Carrie Hosanna
Snow and Tiger
The cast of Thir13en
The cast of Thir13en
Notable characteristics:
Well look, you just
can’t not see the sheer amount of lines, often incredibly thin, that in
particular he uses to mark skin but also clothing texture. It’s astonishing. I
don’t know about you, but I remember being about 12 and realising in art
lessons that when drawing a person, they don’t come with outlines. In fact, if
you’re looking for lines, even children have wrinkles all over their skin. But
when you put them down on paper, it just makes it look as if every time you
draw a person they’re 100 years old.
Well, Andy Clarke
managed to solve that problem – his skins are wrinkled, but not with age, just
with texture. Amazing.
Look closely at Rogue's skni and trousers - thin lines a-go-go! |
Lines of shadow, not of age. Amazing! Words by Andy Diggle |
Unrelated, he’s also a
master at panels that come across like freeze frames in a film – especially
moments of extreme violence.
Who doesn't love a shattered glass cover? |
Storytelling through atmosphere and montage, rather than coherence Words by John Wagner |
On Andy:
Another flame that
burned brightly for a time, only to disappear from the Prog after more
lucrative offers appeared. And good for him! If you ever want an example of a
comics creator who honed their craft in 2000AD before getting jobs on Batman, Andy Clarke is perhaps the prime
example.
The basic Clarke ingredients, but not quite fully-formed. Words by Kek-W |
His earliest 2000AD
work was good, surely, but not quite great. Four years of steady work later,
and he’d become properly excellent, able to work with pre-existing characters
in his own style, but also a reliable co-creator of all new ideas.
His early training
came not on Dredd, but on two
then-new characters who followed the Dredd model of having a bunch of shorter
series with rotating artists*, Sinister
Dexter and Nikolai Dante.
Working his way up to the full lines-as-shadow technique, perhaps somewhat stuck in Bolland-homage mode. Words by Robbie Morrison |
In fact, Clarke even
got to join the two together, briefly, for a somewhat indulgent bit of
cross-Prog shenanigans.
Who are those handsome assassins? Words by Robbie Morrison |
He had the chance to
expand a little on the first full series of Rose
O’Rion. His style seemed to have settled into itself. A little plastic in
texture, perhaps, and some of the expressions were slightly more cartoony than
his anatomically accurate poses.
I do like a good bit of punctuation emanata in my comics; it offsets the gratuitous butt-shots. Words by Kek-W |
He took it up a gear
surprisingly swiftly on one of my favourite early SinDex outings, a sort of origin tale for the duo, Bullfighting
Days. You can see the lines.
It immediately sheds the plastic texture on everything, and gives it some real
verve. Plus, the layouts within and across the page start to zing a bit more
A first encounter for the deadly duo Context by Dan Abnett |
Clarke starts to hone his skills as an action choreographer - still a touch stiff, but so close to greatness. Words by Dan Abnett |
With a leap in style and quality achieved, Clarke moved into the big time with the challenge of building a whole cast of
characters, and a very particular setting, for Thir13en. If I’m honest, the costume design for Joe Bulmer, the
lead character, is a little off-putting, but I can’t deny that it fits, and
that it helps flesh him out beyond the dialogue. But it was Clarke's startling vision of a sort of skin-flesh half creature that really made me sit up an pay attention...
One of 2000AD's all-time great monsters, only around for an episode or two. Words by Mike Carey |
Bulmer's ally Daksha is a superb piece of design, and then there’s the sort-of villain, Durant, Clarke’s most line-encrusted
character yet, who is all kinds of awesome.
Giant hands help to communicate his character Words by Mike Carey |
It’s also the point
where Clarke’s natural affinity for action jumps into cinematic mode, with some
proper freeze-frame stuff.
2000AD's version of that 'widescreen comics' thing that was super-popular in the early 2000s |
And then there's 2000AD's commitment to glorious ultraviolence, in a way that remians unique in mainstream comics. |
I wonder if it’s this
quality that lead to Andy Diggle working with him on Snow/Tiger, which smacks of a comic that was hoping to get picked
up as a TV series, coming as it did when 24 and Spooks were still new, shiny
and generally thrilling. Storytelling skills fly off the page, and the emoting
has improved, too, along the lines of a Steve Dillon (no higher praise in my
book).
Clarke perfects that weird mix of super-detailed backgrounds that are also very light on actual fiddly details. You can see why they've lapped him up in the US! Context by Andy Diggle |
Back in the world of
Sinister Dexter, Clarke introduced a couple of major supprting characters,
Carrie Hosanna – aka Mrs Sinister,
The hint of stiffness and plasticity here betray my chronology - this story happened before 13 and Snow/Tiger... Words by Dan Abnett |
and Vijay, aka Kal Cutter, who has the
delightful body modification of being able to turn his hand into a gun. It
makes no sense but looks cool as funt.
This one did come later, when Clarke was, arguably, fully formed. Words by Dan Abnett |
For his final bow,
Clarke delivered a compact but stellar turn on Shimura, continuing a trend of
making the series more enjoyable through stellar action art, very much in a
1990s straight-to-video mould, complete with gratuitous nudity and
ultraviolence. Lovely stuff.
Now that's what I call a dramatic angle Words by Robbie Morrison |
More on Andy Clarke:
He has a dedicated Tumblr, showing further development and stylistic awesomeness
And a page on Comic Art fans if you want to buy some original art
-can't seem to find any interviews, sadly.
Personal favourites:
Nikolai Dante: The Octobriana Seduction
Sinister Dexter: Bullfighting Days; Bullet Time; Shrink Rap;
Oh Kal Cutter; Job Jobbed
Shimura: Deus X
Thir13en
*Something I’m
especially grateful to David Bishop for instituting, I feel it did no end of
good and am kind of sad doesn’t happen more often. Auteur theory be damned!
Actually, it was Greg Staples who created Carrie Hosanna, in prog 1090's Drop Dead Gorgeous...
ReplyDeleteHow right you are!
ReplyDeleteJust goes to show how much we need a Sinister Dexter: the Complete Whack Files collection. Go on Rebellion, it'll sell tens of copies guaranteed.
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