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Tom Mandrake
Tom Mandrake
from Wikipedia

Tom Mandrake (born 1956)[1] is an American comics artist known for his collaborations with writer John Ostrander on several series, including Grimjack (from First Comics) and Firestorm, The Spectre, and Martian Manhunter from DC Comics.[2]

Key Information

Early life

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Mandrake grew up as a fan of Marvel Comics of the 1960s, as well as painters of the Brandywine School, particularly Maxfield Parrish and Howard Pyle.[3] Together with his friend L.B. Kellogg, he created a fanzine titled First Flight while in high school.[4] Mandrake spent two years at Cleveland's Cooper School of Art,[3] and then two more years at The Kubert School, where he earned his degree.[1][4]

Career

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Mandrake with his wife, fellow comics artist Jan Duursema

Mandrake began working for DC Comics where he drew backup stories for the Sgt. Rock title. In a 2001 interview, he recalled "finally landing my first real work, that was a two part story in DC's New Talent Showcase. Once again with my old buddy L.B. at the writers helm on our pirate epic 'Skydogs'."[4] For Marvel Comics, Mandrake provided finished art over layouts by Sal Buscema on the New Mutants title. Back at DC, he and writer Doug Moench created Black Mask in Batman #386 (August 1985)[5][6] and the Film Freak in Batman #395 (May 1986).[7] Mandrake was one of the contributors to the DC Challenge limited series in 1986 after finishing his run on Batman.[8] In 1992, Mandrake and writer John Ostrander launched The Spectre series at DC Comics.[9] In issue #54 (June 1997), the creative team introduced the character Michael Holt as a new version of Mister Terrific.[10] Following the end of The Spectre series, they moved onto a Martian Manhunter series.[11] In 2001, he worked with writer Dan Mishkin on the short lived series Creeps and in 2006 on the children's book The Forest King: Woodlark's Shadow.[12] In 2007, a story-arc titled "Grotesk" reuniting Ostrander and Mandrake appeared in Batman issues #659-662.[2] An X-Files/30 Days of Night crossover in 2010 was drawn by Mandrake and co-written by 30 Days creator Steve Niles and Adam Jones, the guitarist for the band Tool.[13] Mandrake drew the DC Retroactive: Batman - The '70s one-shot (Sept. 2011)[14] and a revival of Marv Wolfman's Night Force series (May–Nov. 2012).[15] He collaborated with J. Michael Straczynski on the Sidekick series in 2013–2014.[16]

Awards

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Mandrake received the Don Thompson Award in 1992 and 1993.[17]

Personal life

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Mandrake is married to fellow comic book artist Jan Duursema, whom he met while both were students at The Kubert School. Their wedding was held on the school's grounds.[4] The couple have a son, Jack Moses Mandrake,[18] and Sian Mandrake,[19] who is also a Kubert School-trained comics illustrator.[20]

Bibliography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Tom Mandrake is an American comic book artist known for his atmospheric style in horror and superhero genres, particularly his acclaimed five-year run on DC Comics' The Spectre and his extensive collaborations with writer John Ostrander on titles including Grimjack, Firestorm, Martian Manhunter, and The Kents. He has illustrated a wide range of characters and series for major publishers over more than four decades, including Batman, Superman, Martian Manhunter, Wolverine, The Punisher, and The X-Files, while also creating creator-owned projects such as Creeps with Dan Mishkin and To Hell You Ride with Lance Henriksen. A graduate of the Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Art, Mandrake has been a faculty member there for years, teaching Narrative Art and Storytelling while co-developing the school's correspondence course in horror comics. His work often emphasizes grotesque, visually distinctive character designs and genre-blending elements, especially in horror, as seen in Creeps and his long-running Spectre series, which remains a highlight of his career. He has also contributed to other media, including serving as art director on the independent film Zombie Prom.

Early life and education

Early life

Tom Mandrake was born on May 26, 1956, in Ashtabula, Ohio, United States. He grew up as a fan of 1960s Marvel Comics, which helped ignite his interest in sequential storytelling. Mandrake also drew significant inspiration from painters associated with the Brandywine School tradition, particularly Maxfield Parrish and Howard Pyle, whose atmospheric and illustrative styles influenced his artistic sensibilities. While in high school, he collaborated with his friend L.B. Kellogg to produce a fanzine titled First Flight, an early self-published effort that reflected his budding passion for comics and illustration.

Education

Tom Mandrake attended the Cooper School of Art in Cleveland, Ohio, for a couple of years, where he received training in commercial art fundamentals and the importance of meeting deadlines, though he noted the instructors often emphasized menial work over creative aspirations. He subsequently studied at The Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Art in New Jersey from 1977 to 1979, graduating from the program focused on cartooning and graphic art. While attending the Kubert School, he met his future wife, Jan Duursema. This education provided the foundation for his entry into professional comic book illustration shortly thereafter.

Career

Early career

Tom Mandrake began his professional career in comics after graduating from the Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Arts in 1979. Following graduation, he navigated the industry downturn around 1980 by persistently submitting his portfolio while supporting himself as an art director for Modern Drummer magazine. During this time, he took on small assignments, including backup stories for DC Comics' Sgt. Rock title and inking backgrounds for various projects. His first major published feature was a two-part pirate adventure titled "Skydogs," written by L.B. Kellogg, which appeared in DC's New Talent Showcase anthology series. Mandrake's work gained more prominence through contributions to Batman, where he co-created the villain Black Mask alongside writer Doug Moench in Batman #386 (August 1985), providing pencils and inks for the character's origin story "Losing Face." He also contributed artwork to DC's DC Challenge limited series in 1986. These early credits established Mandrake's presence at DC Comics before his long-term collaborations with writer John Ostrander began.

Major collaborations with John Ostrander

Tom Mandrake's most significant and sustained creative partnership has been with writer John Ostrander, producing several notable series that blend superhero action with horror, supernatural, and thematic depth. Their collaboration has spanned multiple publishers and eras, with particularly impactful work at DC Comics in the 1990s. One of their defining joint projects was The Spectre volume 3, published by DC Comics from late 1992 to early 1998 across 62 issues, where Ostrander wrote the entire run and Mandrake served as the primary artist on a majority of issues, including #0–13, 15, 17–19, 21–23, 25, 27–31, and 35–62. This series explored complex religious and moral questions surrounding vengeance, redemption, justice, and the nature of evil, often through graphic depictions of supernatural punishment and metaphysical consequences. In issue #54 (cover-dated June 1997), Ostrander and Mandrake introduced Michael Holt as the new Mister Terrific, portraying him as a brilliant polymath who assumed the mantle previously held by Terry Sloane. Following The Spectre, the pair created Martian Manhunter volume 2 for DC Comics, a 38-issue series running from 1998 to 2001 that served as the character's first extended solo ongoing title. Ostrander wrote the full run, with Mandrake providing the art, focusing on J'onn J'onzz's Martian heritage, his traumatic past including the destruction of his race by his brother Ma'alefa'ak, and his various Earth identities. Earlier in their DC work, Mandrake illustrated Firestorm, the Nuclear Man issues #86–100 during Ostrander's tenure as writer on the title's second volume, contributing to the series' closing arc with enhanced visual scale for elemental and cosmic conflicts. Their later collaborations include the "Grotesk" storyline in Batman #659–662 (2007), a self-contained arc featuring the monstrous villain Grotesk, and the horror graphic novel Kros: Hallowed Ground (2017), a 128-page story set during the Battle of Gettysburg involving a vampire-hunting dampyr. This long-term partnership with Ostrander, especially through their horror-infused superhero work, has been instrumental in shaping Mandrake's reputation for atmospheric, intense storytelling in the genre.

Work for DC Comics

Tom Mandrake has made numerous contributions to DC Comics titles outside his major collaborations with John Ostrander, spanning various series and eras with both extended and shorter stints as penciller. In the early 1980s, he illustrated issues of Arion, Lord of Atlantis. He also provided artwork for issues of The Saga of the Swamp Thing. Mandrake worked on the 1987 miniseries Shazam! The New Beginning, pencilling all 4 issues of the revamp. His other DC credits include scattered contributions to Wonder Woman (3 issues), The New Teen Titans (2 issues), Justice League of America (2 issues), Animal Man (3 issues), and Superman (1 issue), often in anthology stories or fill-ins. He has also illustrated multiple Batman-related stories, including various issues across the main Batman series (scattered over years) and several in Legends of the Dark Knight. In later years, Mandrake pencilled the 2002 Elseworlds miniseries JLA: Destiny (4 issues), and for the 2012 revival of Night Force, he illustrated issues #4–7. For his pencilling work in comics, including his DC contributions, Mandrake received the Don Thompson Award for Best Achievement by a Penciller in 1992 and 1993.

Other publishers and creator-owned projects

Tom Mandrake has contributed to various titles for Marvel Comics, including The New Mutants, The Punisher, Weapon X, Wolverine, Hulk Unchained, and Call of Duty: The Precinct. He also worked on Grimjack for First Comics, The X-Files for IDW Publishing, Sidekick with writer J. Michael Straczynski for Joe’s Comics from 2013 to 2014, and Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter for Titan Comics. Mandrake has pursued several creator-owned projects, often emphasizing horror and supernatural elements. These include Creeps with writer Dan Mishkin at Image Comics, To Hell You Ride with Lance Henriksen and Joe Maddrey at Dark Horse Comics, Screaming Mandrake: The Nailman and Other Strange Tales which he wrote and illustrated himself, and Wisdom with J.M. DeMatteis at Spellbound Comics. Beyond comics, Mandrake has provided illustrations for GRRM: The George R.R. Martin Retrospective, the novel The Forest King, and 100 Deadly Skills: Combat Edition. He also served as art director for the independent film Zombie Prom, which won Best Comics-Oriented Film and the Judges’ Choice Award at the 2006 Comic-Con International Independent Film Festival in San Diego.

Artistic style and influences

Teaching career

Personal life

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