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Jason Lutes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jason Lutes
Jason Lutes
Born (1967-12-07) December 7, 1967 (age 57)
New Jersey, US
Area(s)Cartoonist, Writer
Notable works
Jar of Fools
Berlin
AwardsXeric Award, 1993

Jason Lutes (born December 7, 1967)[1] is an American comics creator. His work is mainly historical fiction, but he also works in traditional fiction. He is best-known for his Berlin series, which he wrote and drew over 22 years. He has also written a handful of other graphic novels, as well as many short pieces for anthologies and compilations. He now teaches comics at the Center for Cartoon Studies.

Biography

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Lutes was born in New Jersey, but his family soon relocated to Missoula, Montana. In his early years, Lutes liked superhero comics, but a trip to France exposed him to European comics like The Adventures of Tintin and Asterix, which he says greatly affected his style of drawing.[2]

Lutes went to college at the Rhode Island School of Design, graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1991. He moved to Seattle after graduation, where he found work for the alternative comics publisher Fantagraphics, and eventually became art director of the alternative weekly The Stranger.[3]

During this period, Lutes began writing and self-publishing his own comic work with Penny Dreadful Press. In 1993 Lutes began serializing a strip for The Stranger, which was collected in 1996 in the critically acclaimed graphic novel Jar of Fools. After two years of research, in 1996 Lutes embarked on the ambitious comic book series Berlin, an ongoing 22-chapter story set in the twilight years of Germany's Weimar Republic. When Berlin's original publisher Black Eye Productions closed in 1998, Drawn & Quarterly took over the series.

Lutes subsequently moved to Asheville, North Carolina, in October 2002;[4][5] this move forms the subject of his autobiographical Rules to Live By, collected in AutobioGraphix by Dark Horse Comics.[6]

In 2007, Hyperion published the graphic novel Houdini: The Handcuff King, written by Lutes and illustrated by Nick Bertozzi.

Starting in the spring of 2008, he became part of the faculty of the Center for Cartoon Studies; he is now an adjunct professor there.[7]

Personal life

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Lutes has two sons,[7] Clem (born 2006) and Max, with his partner Becka Warren.[8]

Bibliography

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Lutes has published work in a variety of forms.[9]

Series

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  • Jar of Fools (1994)
  • Berlin (1996–2018, ISBN 978-1770463264)

Children's series

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Graphic novels

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Short work

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Illustrations

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Troubled by the Fire, by Laura Veirs

Occasional illustrations:[11]

Unpublished work

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Unpublished work includes:[14]

  • 1-page biography of J. R. R. Tolkien for The Stranger (1997)
  • "Which Witch is Witch?", 3-page story for "Sam Shade" in Nickelodeon Magazine, written by Paul Karasik (2003)
  • short Charles Atlas parody for The Stranger (2004)

Other work

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Lutes has done some game work,[15] such as unit portraits for the open-source video game Battle for Wesnoth (2006), a map for Dominions 3: The Awakening (2006), and website illustration for City of Heroes (2005).

References

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  1. ^ "Jason Lutes" at Comic Creator
  2. ^ Jason Lutes profile at Read Yourself RAW
  3. ^ Jason Lutes biography at his publisher, Drawn & Quarterly
  4. ^ Hulk vs. the Universe, by Jason Lutes
  5. ^ Lutes at Forefront of Graphic Literature, Asheville, NC Citizen-Times, Feb. 21 2003
  6. ^ AutobioGraphix, 2003, ISBN 978-1-59307-038-0
  7. ^ a b Morrow, Julina. "15 Questions," Archived 2013-06-03 at the Wayback Machine Sequential Highway (Nov. 8, 2012).
  8. ^ Lutes, Jason. "Spring in Vermont," Official blog (Apr. 22, 2008).
  9. ^ Coyote vs. Wolf (Lutes's blog), Bibliography
  10. ^ AutobioGraphix, pp. 23–28, 2003, ISBN 978-1-59307-038-0
  11. ^ Coyote vs. Wolf (Lutes's blog), Illustration
  12. ^ Arise!, October 16, 2009 by Jason Lutes
  13. ^ How Did Economists Get It So Wrong? by Paul Krugman, The New York Times, September 2, 2009
  14. ^ Coyote vs. Wolf (Lutes's blog), Comics Work
  15. ^ Coyote vs. Wolf (Lutes's blog), Game Work
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