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Joan March
Spanish comics artist

Joan March

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Spanish comics artist
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Granollers, Spain
Age
72 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Joan March i Zuriguel (Granollers, Barcelona, October 11, 1952) is a Spanish cartoonist, member of the ill-fated third generation the Bruguera School, alongside other authors such as Casanyes, Esegé, the Fresno brothers, Rovira and Rafael Vaquer. His most famous series are El Mini Rey and Tranqui y Tronco.

Biography

In 1970 he was hired by Bruguera publisher where he worked illustrating jokes and as an inker for Escobar. A year later he created his first characters for magazines Din Dan (Ruperto, Calixto y Damián) and Pulgarcito(Ataúlfo y Gedeón, La Familia Potosí) and at the same time he began to collaborate with magazines of other publishers such as Gaceta Junior, (where he created Don Meñique ), and in Strong by Argos publisher.

In 1974 he abandoned comics to concentrate on painting for four years, but he retourned to Bruguera where he created in 1978 the series El Mini Rey (about a short and despotic king and his misunderstandings with his henchman) In the 1980s he created the series Tranqui y Tronco about two wannabe rock musicians who work in odd jobs during the madrid scene.

After Ediciones B bought Bruguera in 1986 he created series such as Maxtron (1987) in "Pulgarcito", Todos estamos locos (1989) in "Superlópez" and Los Peláez in Zipi y Zape Extra (1994).

Series

  • "Don Meñique" (Gaceta Junior) (1971).
  • "Ruperto" (in Din Dan) (1971).
  • "Ataúlfo y Gedeón" (in Pulgarcito) (1971).
  • "Calixto y Damián" (in Din Dan) (1971).
  • "La Familia Potosí" (in Pulgarcito) (1971).
  • "El Mini Rey" (in Mortadelo, Super Mortadelo) (197-)
  • "Ambrosio Carabino" (in Super Pulgarcito, 2ª época) (197-),
  • "Tranqui y Tronco" (in Mortadelo) (198-).
  • "Maxtron" (in Pulgarcito, Ediciones B) (1987).
  • "Todos estamos locos" (in Superlópez, sello B) (1987).
  • "Los Peláez" (en Zipi y Zape Extra) (1994).
  • "Todos estamos locos" (B: Olé!, núm.359) (1989).
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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