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Wikipedia

Image Comics

Image Comics is an American comic book publisher and is the third largest direct market comic book and graphic novel publisher in the industry by market share.[4]

Image Comics
StatusActive
Founded1992; 32 years ago (1992)
Founders
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationPortland, Oregon
Distribution
Key people
Publication typesComic books, graphic novels
Fiction genres
Imprints
Official websiteOfficial website

It was founded in 1992 by several high-profile illustrators as a venue for creator-owned properties, in which comics creators could publish material of their own creation without giving up the copyrights to those properties. Normally this is not the case in the work-for-hire-dominated American comics industry, where the legal author is a publisher, such as Marvel Comics or DC Comics, and the creator is an employee of that publisher. Its output was originally dominated by superhero and fantasy titles from the studios of the founding Image partners, but now includes comics in many genres by numerous independent creators.

Its best-known publications include Spawn, The Maxx, Savage Dragon, Witchblade, Bone, The Walking Dead, Invincible, Saga, Jupiter's Legacy, Kick-Ass, Radiant Black and Stray Dogs.

History edit

Founding edit

 
Panel at ComicCon 2007 on the 15th anniversary of the founding of Image Comics. From left: Jim Lee, Todd McFarlane, Erik Larsen, Jim Valentino, Marc Silvestri, Rob Liefeld and Whilce Portacio

In the early 1990s, artists Todd McFarlane, Rob Liefeld, and Jim Lee broke successive modern sales records at Marvel Comics with Spider-Man #1, X-Force #1, and X-Men #1 respectively.[5] However, the creators became discontent. Liefeld worried that their success actually made their positions at Marvel precarious. "We had become too big for the system," he said in 2000. "Marvel didn't want a star system, but with Todd's, Jim's and my books selling millions of copies, that's what we were becoming. They were trying to reproduce the success of our books."[6] McFarlane and Lee, on the other hand, felt undervalued at Marvel, where they were not paid when their art was reused for merchandise such as t-shirts.[7]

Malibu Comics agreed to publish a creator-owned title by Liefeld in 1991. In July that year he announced plans to publish an independent comic called Youngblood[8] and in September advertised a title called The Executioners to be published by "Image Comics." Although Liefeld shelved plans for The Executioners after Marvel threatened to both sue him and fire him from X-Force (the characters later appeared in Youngblood and their own title as "The Berzerkers"), the incident only further motivated him to pursue independent publishing.[6][9]

Liefeld soon invited Amazing Spider-Man artist Erik Larsen, Guardians of the Galaxy artist Jim Valentino, and McFarlane to join Image Comics. McFarlane then recruited Jim Lee at the Sotheby's auction in New York in December 1991. Wolverine artist Marc Silvestri, who was also in town for the event, was also invited.[6] Lee invited Uncanny X-Men artist Whilce Portacio shortly after.[10] These seven creators became the original founding partners of Image Comics.

Image's organizing charter had two key provisions:[11][12]

  • Image would not own any creator's work; the creator would. Image itself would own no intellectual property except the company trademarks: its name and its logo.[13]
  • No Image partner would interfere—creatively or financially—with any other partner's work.

Early years edit

The founders' initial titles were produced under the Image name, but published through Malibu Comics, which provided administrative, production, distribution and marketing support.[14]

The first Image comic published was Liefeld's Youngblood #1 in April, 1992. Pre-orders for the book reached 930,000 copies, beating the previous record for both the top selling creator-owned comic and top selling independent comic of all time.[15][16] The second Image title, McFarlane's Spawn #1, debuted with a print run of 1.7 million copies in May 1992. Larsen's The Savage Dragon, Lee's WildC.A.T.S, Valentino's ShadowHawk, and Silvestri's CyberForce followed, all with strong sales to comic shops.[17]

Within a few months, Malibu had almost 10% of the North American comics market share thanks to Image,[18] briefly exceeding that of industry giant DC Comics.[19] In early 1993 Image left Malibu and established itself as an independent company, hiring Tony Lobito as full-time publisher.[20][21] Image became the first publishing company to challenge Marvel and DC's dominance since the establishment of the direct market.[22]

Portacio was the only founder not to deliver the first issue of his own series in 1992. Initially, Portacio was reported to be working on a title called Huntsman with Chris Claremont, but opted instead to create his own title called Wetworks (the Huntsman character later appeared in issues of WildC.A.T.S and CyberForce written by Claremont).[17] However, work on the series was significantly delayed due to the death of Portacio's sister and he decided to resign as an Image partner.[23] In 2022, former Incredible Hulk artist Dale Keown said that he was approached in 1992 about taking Portacio's place, but declined because his criminal record made it difficult to travel outside his home country of Canada.[24] Keown still became the first non-founder to publish a creator-owned title with Image. The first issue of his series Pitt sold more than one million copies to comic shops. It was originally scheduled for November 1992 but shipped several months late.[17]

Image continued to expand in 1993 with new titles from both founders, such as Liefeld's Bloodstrike and Lee's StormWatch, and non-founders, including Sam Kieth's The Maxx, Larry Stroman's Tribe, Keith Giffen's Trencher, and Mike Grell's Shaman's Tears,[25] and 1963 by Alan Moore, Steve Bissette, and Rick Vietch.[26]Tribe became the largest-selling African-American-created comic, with more than one million copies sold to comic shops.[27] Moore went on to work on several Image series, including Spawn, WildC.A.T.S, The Maxx, and Supreme.

Also in 1993, Image and Valiant Comics began publishing the inter-company crossover Deathmate, which comics historian Jason Sacks described it as the first major comic universe crossover since the Marvel/DC crossover The Uncanny X-Men and The New Teen Titans was published in 1982.[28]

Some of the founders' studios came to resemble separate publishers,[6] each with several ongoing series set in a shared universe.[29] The use of freelancers to write or illustrate series that were owned by the Image partners led to criticism that some of them had reproduced the very system they had rebelled against, but with them in charge instead of a corporation.[6][30]

Many Image series quickly fell behind their intended publishing schedule (See "Controversies" below). In response, retailers cut orders to reduce their risk.[31] In August 1993, Image cut back its line, citing lateness and a desire to focus on books by the founders.[32] The company announced it had canceled Shaman's Tears, Stupid, Trencher, and Tribe and that several mini-series, including 1963 and Pitt would not become ongoing series. Moore's Enemies of Mankind and Frank Miller's Big Guy were "indefinitely postponed."[32]

In late 1993, Image hired Larry Marder, an independent cartoonist and former marketer for Chicago comics retail chain Moondog, to act as "executive director" for the publisher, ranking above Lobito and reporting directly to the partners.[33] McFarlane told The Comics Journal that the founders had ignored Lobito's advice in the past, even when he was correct, because they didn't have confidence in his guidance because of his age and relative inexperience.[33]

Despite the scale back in 1993, Image continued to publish creator-owned comics by a variety of creators. Though many Image titles sold more than 500,000 copies per issue in 1992 and 1993, by mid-1994 only the top-selling titles reached 250,000 in sales.[34] Marder determined that Image needed to publish at least 30 comic books per month to stay in business. "And if the partners did not provide those books, I had to get those books wherever I could find them," Marder explained in 2007.[27] Titles added in the mid-1990s included Hellshock by Jae Lee, Groo by Sergio Aragonés, Bone by Jeff Smith, A Distant Soil by Colleen Doran, and Astro City by Kurt Busiek, Brent Anderson and Alex Ross.[35] In 1996, Lee founded a new sub-imprint called Homage Comics under his WildStorm Studios label. Described as a "home for creator-owned material as well as a safe haven from an increasingly challenging comic book market," the initial line-up consisted of Astro City, Terry Moore's previously self-published Strangers in Paradise, and a new title called Leave it to Chance by James Robinson and Paul Smith.[36]

The Image founders also continued to produce new top-selling series, such as Gen13 from WildStorm Studios in 1994, and Witchblade and The Darkness from Silvestri's Top Cow Productions in 1995 and 1996 respectively.[37] In 1998, WildStorm launched the commercially successful Cliffhanger sub-imprint to showcase created owned titles from a new generation of popular artists, starting with Humberto Ramos, J. Scott Campbell, Joe Madureira.[38]

Partial break-up edit

There were tensions between the Image Comics founders from the very beginning, according to Liefeld, as the founders competed with each other for sales and talent. Liefeld founded his own separate company, Maximum Press, in late 1994 largely in response to those tensions and a realization that he wouldn't always be a part of Image, he told CBR in 2001.[39] At the time Maximum Press was announced, he had described it as an imprint for non-superhero titles, such as the science fantasy Warchild.[40]

Liefeld proposed a merger between his Extreme Studios imprint and Silvestri's Top Cow imprint in 1996, according to Matt Hawkins, who worked for Liefeld's studios from 1993 until 1998 and has been president of Silvestri's Top Cow Productions since 1998. Hawkins said that when Liefeld realized that Silvestri was going to reject his offer, he decided instead to try to recruit some of Top Cow's artists, including Witchblade artist Mike Turner. At one point Hawkins called Turner about working on an Avengelyne project for Maximum Press, but Silvestri took the phone and yelled at Hawkins.[41]

Meanwhile, Liefeld moved some of his titles from Image Comics to Maximum Press, escalating tensions within the company.[39] In the summer of 1996, shortly after the incident with Turner and Hawkins, Silvestri announced that he would leave Image Comics, citing irreconcilable differences with a then-unnamed Image partner.[42]

Liefeld resigned from Image Comics in September 1996 shortly before a vote to force him out of the company.[43][44][45] Silvestri reversed his plans to leave Image shortly after.[44]

Liefeld filed suit against Image in October 1997 for wrongful termination and breach of contract for money he claimed was owed to him. Image counter sued, claiming Liefeld had misused Image funds and staff resources for his Maximum Press titles and failed to repay an overpayment made by the company. The suits were settled in February, 1997. Terms of the settlement were not disclosed, but Marder and Valentino claimed Liefeld repaid the company the money he owed.[46]

Liefeld later reconciled with the Image partners and returned to the company as a creator, as opposed to partner, in 2007.[47]

Jim Lee sold WildStorm and its characters to DC Comics in 1998,[48][49] citing a desire to exchange his responsibilities as a publisher for the opportunity to do more creative work.[50]

Diversification edit

 
A panel of non-founding Image creators at the 2010 New York Comic Con (l–r): Tomm Coker, Tim Seeley, Ben McCool, James Zhang, Nick Spencer and Ron Marz

Image continued to diversify, adding titles such as Brian Michael Bendis's Jinx and Matt Wagner's Mage to the company's line-up in 1997, while Valentino's Shadowline imprint published more than 12 black and white titles, including his own A Touch of Silver, James A. Owen's Starchild, Zander Cannon's The Replacement God, Mike Baron's The Badger, and Michael Avon Oeming's Ship of Fools. Creators paid a flat fee of $2,000 to Image and $500 to Shadowline for administrative costs and kept all other proceeds from their sales, as well as all intellectual property rights.[51]

After Marder left Image in 1999 to help run McFarlane Toys,[52] Valentino was named the company's publisher.[53] He later said he saw his time as publisher as an extension of what he had been doing with Shadowline.[54] He is often credited for making Image Comics into the diverse publisher that it is seen as today.[55] Sacks wrote that by the end of 1999, Image had bolstered its reputation "as the place to find the highest quality creator-owned material."[56]

In the early 2000s, a number of imprints not owned by the Image partners began publishing licensed material through Image. Devil's Due launched a new G.I. Joe series via Image in 2001, MVCreations launched a new Masters of the Universe series in 2002, Udon Entertainment began publishing a series based on the Street Fighter video game franchise in 2003, and the imprint DB Productions began publishing an adaptation of George R. R. Martin's The Hedge Knight, also in 2003.[57]

Image Comics hired Eric Stephenson, who had worked as an editor and writer for Liefeld's Extreme Studios in the early days of Image, as marketing directory in 2002.[58][59] In 2003, Image published Robert Kirkman and Tony Moore's zombie comic The Walking Dead, which went on to become one of the top-selling comics on the market.[60] Valentino originally rejected the title, fearing the premise was too familiar. Kirkman lied and said he planned to reveal that the aliens were behind the zombies, a premise Stephenson found interesting enough to encourage Valentino to accept. Kirkman later admitted that he never planned to include aliens in the comic.[61]

Other titles published during Valentino's tenure include Kirkman and Cory Walker's Invincible; Bendis's Powers; Garth Ennis, Jimmy Palmiotti, and Amanda Conner's The Pro; Jay Faerber's Noble Causes, and Warren Ellis and Chris Weston's Ministry of Space.[62]

Image's market share declined in the mid-2000s as the imprints Devil's Due, Dreamwave Productions, MVCreations, Udon Entertainment, and DB Productions departed the company and Dark Horse Comics surpassed Image to become the third largest comic book publisher. Larsen took over as publisher in 2004, intending to publish more mainstream comics.[63] Valentino returned to running the Shadowline imprint.[54] Titles launched during Larsen's tenure include Ellis and Ben Templesmith's Fell; Casey and Tom Scioli's Godland; Richard Starkings's Elephantmen; Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie's Phonogram; and The Sword by the Luna Brothers.

In 2007, Liefeld returned to Image as a creator, as opposed to partner, to publish a new Youngblood series written by Joe Casey with art by Derec Donovan and Val Staples. Liefeld credited Kirkman for bringing him back to Image.[47]

Larsen stepped down as publisher to focus more on The Savage Dragon in July 2008 and Stephenson was promoted to the position.[64]

Eric Stephenson era edit

Shortly after Stephenson's appointment, Image added Robert Kirkman as the company's first new partner since its founding.[65] Kirkman's black-and-white series The Walking Dead was at that time already a long-running and popular series (it would run for 193 issues and serve as the basis for three television series), and his series Invincible was one of the longest-running series featuring a superhero created in the early 2000s (it would run for 144 issues). Kirkman created an imprint under his direction, known as Skybound.[66]

Starting in 2009, Image began to greatly expand both the types of comics it publishes and the types of creators drawn to the publisher,[67] beginning a period of critical acclaim. Among its award-winning series, are Chew, Morning Glories, Fatale, The Manhattan Projects and Saga. Saga creator Brian K. Vaughan explained why he chose Image to publish that series:

I love all the other companies I've worked with, but I think Image might be the only publisher left that can still offer a contract I would consider "fully creator-owned." Saga is a really important story to me, so I wanted a guarantee of no content restrictions or other creative interference, and I needed to maintain 100% control and ownership of all non-publishing rights with the artist, including the right to never have our comic turned into a movie or television show or whatever.[68]

The Beat named Stephenson the Comics Industry Person of the Year in 2012 for what editor-in-chief Heidi MacDonald described as Stephenson's "creative revitalization" of Image.[69] MacDonald cited the publication of Saga and other new titles from popular creators like Grant Morrison, Jonathan Hickman and Ed Brubaker, along with "homegrown hits" from Image like Chew, Mornings Glories, and Thief of Thieves and Stephenson's own Nowhere Men among his accomplishments.

Image's sales grew significantly during this period[70] to a market share of around 10% in 2015,[71] and an influx of Marvel- and DC-associated creators began publishing creator-owned work with them.[72] As a result, Image was voted Diamond Comic Distributors' Publisher of the Year Over 4% three years in a row between 2013 and 2015.[73] By this time, a clear majority of titles Image published in a given month were non-studio productions. Meanwhile, McFarlane's Spawn and related titles, his McFarlane Toys line, Silvestri's Top Cow imprint and Kirkman's various series remained a substantial segment of Image's total sales. As of 2020, McFarlane's Spawn and Larsen's Savage Dragon were the longest-running creator-owned titles published by Image, with over 300 and 250 issues, respectively.

The company's headquarters moved from Berkeley, California to Portland, Oregon in 2017.[71] The following year, Stephenson became an Image partner, board member, and chief creative officer.[59][74] Prior to Berkeley, its headquarters was located first in Anaheim, California and then in Oakland, California.[75]

In November 2021, members of the editorial, production, sales and accounting staff formed Comic Book Workers United (CBWU), a trade union affiliated with the Communications Workers of America; however, Image did not voluntarily recognize the union.[76][77] When it was certified by a vote in January 2022, it became the first such union in the American comics industry.[78][79] CBWU ratified their first union contract with Image Comics in March 2023.[80][81]

Controversies edit

Late shipping and the speculative bubble burst edit

Image Comics became notorious for shipping products late. After a peak in early 1993, the comics market experienced a steep downturn as the speculative bubble burst. Around 20% of all comic book stores went out of business in 1993, industry analyst Mel Thompson estimated, compared to the typical attrition rate of around 10% in prior years. Many comics industry professionals blamed speculators for the market downturn, but many retailers cited Image's erratic publishing record as a key cause of fiscal strain for stores.[82]

Every single Image comic scheduled to ship in the first quarter of 1993 shipped late.[83] In April 1993, only 15.3% of the company's titles shipped on time, compared with 90.1% shipped on time by DC, 79.2% by Marvel, and 100% by Valiant.[84] Some titles ended up shipping out of sequence. For example, the first issue of Liefeld's on-going Brigade series shipped before the concluding issue of the Brigade limited series,[85] and Spawn #21 shipped before issues #19 and #20.[86] Deathmate Red, Liefeld's portion of the inter-company crossover with Valiant Comics, became emblematic of Image's problems. The book shipped four months late, well after the release of the series epilogue.[28]

Retailers typically order comics two months in advance, on a non-returnable basis. Late books create cash flow issues for retailers, and in many cases, fans lost interest in late books by the time they shipped. Retailers estimated that late shipping could affect sales by as much as 60%, according to The Comics Journal. Late books also make it harder for retailers to plan purchases, because they have to order the next issues in a series before they see how well the earlier issues sold. "When books start shipping late, you end up ordering four, five, six issues before you see sales, and that's where the greater danger is," Hanley's Universe owner Jim Hanley told The Comics Journal in 1994.[87]

Todd McFarlane told The Comics Journal that the blame for the market collapse should not be pinned entirely on Image. He argued that the company shared responsibility with other publishers, distributors, and retailers alike, saying that Image shipping books on time wouldn't "stop retailers from being stupid."[88] In a Comics Retailer interview, McFarlane blamed the industry downturn on greed, saying he hoped that retailers who over-ordered popular titles, including Spawn, went bankrupt.[89]

Based on public orders and shipping data, The Comics Journal and Thompson concluded that because Image titles accounted for such a large percentage of both late books and dollars spent, the company was more culpable for the situation than the Image partners were willing to admit.[90]

In 2007, comics journalist George Khoury wrote that Marvel's decision to distribute its product exclusively through its own distribution subsidiary beginning in 1995 had a bigger long-term impact on the comics industry than Image's business practices. Diamond Distributors founder Steve Gepp told Khoury that Image helped expand the market for comic books, and Mile High Comics proprietor Chuck Rozanski pointed to the return of Superman less than six months after the Death of Superman, as the moment the speculative bubble burst. Khoury concluded that everyone in the industry was to blame for the comics market crash, including publishers, speculators, readers, retailers, creators, and editors.[91]

"Many consider Deathmate the comic book that singlehandedly put an end to the industry's prosperous times and the biggest reason why so many comic book stores closed its doors for good," comics historian Jason Sacks wrote in 2018. "In truth, there was plenty of blame to go around."[28]

List of imprints edit

This list also includes studios and partners. Image considers these studios as separate publishing companies that operate in concert with Image and each studio as fully autonomous from Image Central.[92]

Current edit

Former edit

Accolades edit

Image Comics titles have garnered both comics and mainstream critical acclaim. Image Comics titles boast multiple award nominations and wins across all categories in the Eisner Awards, Hugo Awards, Russ Manning Awards, The Edgar Awards, Bram Stoker Awards, Young Adult Library Association's Great Graphic Novels for Teens and more. Image Comics' title list includes domestic and international bestsellers with regular appearances on The New York Times bestseller list, The Washington Post's bestseller list, USA Today's bestseller list, the Amazon.com bestseller list and more.

In July 2018, Marjorie Liu won the Eisner Award for Best Writer for her work on Monstress, making her the first woman in history to win in the category.[95]

In April 2019, Image Comics titles received a total of 30 Eisner Award nominations—more than any other nominated publisher—and made history as the first publisher to sweep the Best New Series category,[96] with all six titles nominated published by Image.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Alverson, Brigid (May 24, 2023). "Image Goes Exclusive with Lunar for Direct Market Distribution". ICv2. Retrieved May 24, 2023.
  2. ^ "Our Publishers". from the original on September 11, 2017. Retrieved September 10, 2017. "IMAGE SIGNS EXCLUSIVE BOOK DISTRIBUTION DEAL WITH S&S". Retrieved August 6, 2023.
  3. ^ "IMAGE SIGNS EXCLUSIVE BOOK DISTRIBUTION DEAL WITH S&S". Retrieved August 6, 2023.
  4. ^ Alverson, Brigid (October 16, 2023). "Comic Store Market Shares – Q3 2023". icv2.com. Retrieved October 31, 2023.
  5. ^ Sacks & Dallas (2018, p. 12,36)
  6. ^ a b c d e Dean, Michael (October 25, 2000). . The Comics Journal. Archived from the original on September 8, 2007. Retrieved March 15, 2008.
  7. ^ Khoury (2007, p. 50) Dean, Michael (October 25, 2000). . The Comics Journal. Archived from the original on September 8, 2007. Retrieved March 15, 2008.
  8. ^ Kanalz, Hank (July 1991). "New Mutants No More". Comic Scene Spectacular. USA: Starlog Communications. p. 10.
  9. ^ Howe, Sean (2013). Marvel Comics the Untold Story. USA: HarperCollins. pp. 330–331. ISBN 9780062314697.Howe, Sean (October 13, 2013). "Excerpted from Marvel Comics The Untold". Sean Howe's Tumblr. Youngblood, vol. 1, no. 2 (July 1992). Image Comics. Berzerkers, vol. 1, no. 1 (August 1995). Image Comics.
  10. ^ Khouri, Andy (July 27, 2007). "CCI: Image Comics: The Founders" January 26, 2021, at the Wayback Machine. CBR.com.
  11. ^ , The Comics Journal, 2005-10-25. Retrieved on 2008-03-15.
  12. ^ Erik Larsen, "Grand Larseny", printed in the back of various Image titles, February 2008
  13. ^ Larsen, Erik (November 15, 2011). . Image Comics. Archived from the original on April 26, 2012.
  14. ^ "Bye Bye Marvel; Here Comes Image: Portacio, Claremont, Liefeld, Jim Lee Join McFarlane's New Imprint at Malibu". The Comics Journal (148): 11–12. February 1992. Johnston, Rich (February 26, 2012). "The Not Quite Secret Origin Of Image Comics". bleedingcool.com. from the original on April 2, 2019. Retrieved August 27, 2015.
  15. ^ Sacks & Dallas (2018, p. 62)
  16. ^ "First Image Comics Title Sets Record". The Comics Buyer's Guide. February 21, 1992. p. 22.
  17. ^ a b c Sacks & Dallas (2018, pp. 62–67)
  18. ^ "NewsWatch: Malibu Commands 9.73% Market Share," The Comics Journal #151 (July 1992), p. 21.
  19. ^ "Malibu Moves Ahead of DC in Comics Market," The Comics Journal #152 (August 1992), pp. 7–8.
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  21. ^ Cunningham, Brian (January 1994). "The Most Influential People in the Comic Book Industry". Wizard: The Comics Magazine. No. 29. USA: Garab Shamus Enterprises. p. 100.
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  23. ^ Cynthia de Castro (December 7, 2008). . Asian Journal. Archived from the original on October 31, 2010.
  24. ^ "AFTERLIFE WITH NASSER #175 DALE KEOWN INTERVIEW!". YouTube.com. Event occurs at 14:15. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
  25. ^ Sacks & Dallas (2018, pp. 91–93)
  26. ^ Sacks & Dallas (2018, pp. 95–96)
  27. ^ a b Khoury (2007, p. 215)
  28. ^ a b c Sacks & Dallas (2018, pp. 96–98)
  29. ^ Johnston, Richard (February 14, 2020). "SCOOP: Return Of The Image Comics Shared-Superhero Universe - and Time to Start Hoarding Savage Dragon". bleedingcool.com. Retrieved July 13, 2023.
  30. ^ "The Creator's Bill of Rights: A Chat with Steve Bissette". from the original on September 28, 2011. Retrieved November 17, 2011.
  31. ^ Reynolds (1994, p. 27)
  32. ^ a b "Image cuts back". The Comics Journal (161): 27. August 1993.
  33. ^ a b "Newswatch: Larry Marder Joins Image," The Comics Journal #166 (February 1994), p. 40.
  34. ^ Sacks & Dallas (2018, p. 153)
  35. ^ Jae Lee: Khoury (2007, p. 233) Groo, Astro City, Bone, A Distant Soil: Sacks & Dallas (2018, p. 154,188,192,218)
  36. ^ Sacks & Dallas (2018, pp. 217–218)
  37. ^ Sacks & Dallas (2018, pp. 252–253)
  38. ^ Sacks & Dallas (2018, p. 253) Senreich, Matthew (February 1, 1998). "Cliffhanger". Wizard: The Comics Magazine. USA: Garab Shamus Enterprises. "1998 Comic Book Sales to Comics Shops". Comichron. Retrieved May 23, 2023.
  39. ^ a b C. B. R. Staff (July 30, 2001). "To the Extreme: A conversation with Rob Liefeld". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2023.
  40. ^ "Extreme Unveils Maximum Imprint". Hero Illustrated. No. 16. USA: Warrior Publications. October 1994. p. 19.
  41. ^ Khoury (2007, p. 159)
  42. ^ Lacey, John B (August 1996). "Marc Silvestri Leaves Image". Wizard: The Comics Magazine. No. 60. USA: Garab Shamus Enterprises. p. 18.
  43. ^ "Rob Liefeld on his career in comics and its accompanying controversies," The Comics Journal #195 (April 1997), p. 27.
  44. ^ a b Sacks & Dallas (2018, p. 219)
  45. ^ "Chapter Three: Image Litigation, Cont.", The Comics Journal #192 (December 1996) pp. 17–19.
  46. ^ "News Watch: Image, Liefeld Settle Lawsuit, if not their Differences," The Comics Journal #195 (April 1997), p. 12.
  47. ^ a b . Newsarama. August 1, 2007. Archived from the original on February 1, 2009.
  48. ^ "D.C. Comics ready to ride WildStorm". Variety. September 3, 1998. Retrieved May 22, 2023.
  49. ^ Itzkoff, Dave (February 19, 2010). "Heroes of DC Comics Get Ready for Closeup". The New York times. Retrieved May 22, 2023.
  50. ^ Tantimedh, Adi (February 25, 2006). "New York Comic Con, Day One: Jim Lee Spotlight". Comic Book Resources. from the original on December 27, 2013.
  51. ^ Sacks & Dallas (2018, pp. 238–239)
  52. ^ Khoury (2007, pp. 154–155)
  53. ^ Sacks & Dallas (2018, p. 272)
  54. ^ a b Harper, David (September 14, 2011). "Multiversity Comics Presents: Jim Valentino". Multiversity Comics. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
  55. ^ "A Touch of Image: An interview with Jim Valentino". CBR. February 1, 2002. Retrieved July 27, 2023. "Jim Valentino's Shadowhawk: Year One". Sequart Organization. Retrieved July 27, 2023. Johnston (March 1, 2022). "Jim Valentino's The Last ShadowHawk From Image Comics In August 2022". bleedingcool.com. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
  56. ^ Sacks & Dallas (2018, p. 273)
  57. ^ "The G .I. Joe Revival That Was Very '80s And Very Y2K". CBR. September 5, 2022. Retrieved July 27, 2023. "Image's Masters of the Universe Revival Wasn't Exactly Classic He-Man". CBR. July 18, 2021. Retrieved July 27, 2023. "'Street Fighter' takes the fight to Devil's Due". CBR. November 24, 2003. Retrieved July 27, 2023. "Chivalry Isn't Dead: 'The Hedge Knight' #2". CBR. August 8, 2003. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
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  62. ^ Khoury (2007, p. 137)
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  65. ^ Brady, Matt (July 22, 2008). "Robert Kirkman Named Image Partner" November 20, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. Newsarama.
  66. ^ Armitage, Hugh (July 20, 2010). "Robert Kirkman launches Skybound imprint" April 26, 2017, at the Wayback Machine. Digital Spy.
  67. ^ Hennum, Shea (March 12, 2015). "What Spawn Means to the Future of Image" April 26, 2017, at the Wayback Machine. Paste.
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References edit

  • Sacks, Jason; Dallas, Keith (2018). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1990s. USA: TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 9781605490847.
  • Khoury, George (June 2007). Image Comics: The Road To Independence. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 1-893905-71-3. excerpts:
  • Image Comics at the Grand Comics Database
  • Image Comics. Big Comic Book DataBase.
  • Reynolds, Eric (February 1994). "Industry Sales Records in 1993 Shadowed by Collapse of Speculator Boom". The Comics Journal (166).
  • Reynolds, Eric (February 1994b). "Capital Announces Controversial Penalty Fees for Publishers". The Comics Journal (166).

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)

image, comics, american, comic, book, publisher, third, largest, direct, market, comic, book, graphic, novel, publisher, industry, market, share, statusactivefounded1992, years, 1992, founderserik, larsenjim, leerob, liefeldtodd, mcfarlanewhilce, portaciomarc,. Image Comics is an American comic book publisher and is the third largest direct market comic book and graphic novel publisher in the industry by market share 4 Image ComicsStatusActiveFounded1992 32 years ago 1992 FoundersErik LarsenJim LeeRob LiefeldTodd McFarlaneWhilce PortacioMarc SilvestriJim ValentinoCountry of originUnited StatesHeadquarters locationPortland OregonDistributionLunar Distribution direct market starting September 2023 1 Diamond Comic Distributors Diamond Book Distributors books until January 2024 2 and direct market sub distributor through Lunar Distribution starting September 2023 direct market until September 2023 1 Simon amp Schuster books starting January 2024 3 Key peopleTodd McFarlane President Jim Valentino Vice President Marc Silvestri CEO Robert Kirkman COO Erik Larsen CFO Eric Stephenson Publisher CCO Publication typesComic books graphic novelsFiction genresSuperhero Horror Fantasy Science fiction Action Adventure Crime ComedyImprintsHighbrow Entertainment ShadowLine Skybound Entertainment Todd McFarlane Productions Top Cow ProductionsOfficial websiteOfficial website It was founded in 1992 by several high profile illustrators as a venue for creator owned properties in which comics creators could publish material of their own creation without giving up the copyrights to those properties Normally this is not the case in the work for hire dominated American comics industry where the legal author is a publisher such as Marvel Comics or DC Comics and the creator is an employee of that publisher Its output was originally dominated by superhero and fantasy titles from the studios of the founding Image partners but now includes comics in many genres by numerous independent creators Its best known publications include Spawn The Maxx Savage Dragon Witchblade Bone The Walking Dead Invincible Saga Jupiter s Legacy Kick Ass Radiant Black and Stray Dogs Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 1 2 Early years 1 3 Partial break up 1 4 Diversification 1 5 Eric Stephenson era 2 Controversies 2 1 Late shipping and the speculative bubble burst 3 List of imprints 3 1 Current 3 2 Former 4 Accolades 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory editFounding edit nbsp Panel at ComicCon 2007 on the 15th anniversary of the founding of Image Comics From left Jim Lee Todd McFarlane Erik Larsen Jim Valentino Marc Silvestri Rob Liefeld and Whilce Portacio In the early 1990s artists Todd McFarlane Rob Liefeld and Jim Lee broke successive modern sales records at Marvel Comics with Spider Man 1 X Force 1 and X Men 1 respectively 5 However the creators became discontent Liefeld worried that their success actually made their positions at Marvel precarious We had become too big for the system he said in 2000 Marvel didn t want a star system but with Todd s Jim s and my books selling millions of copies that s what we were becoming They were trying to reproduce the success of our books 6 McFarlane and Lee on the other hand felt undervalued at Marvel where they were not paid when their art was reused for merchandise such as t shirts 7 Malibu Comics agreed to publish a creator owned title by Liefeld in 1991 In July that year he announced plans to publish an independent comic called Youngblood 8 and in September advertised a title called The Executioners to be published by Image Comics Although Liefeld shelved plans for The Executioners after Marvel threatened to both sue him and fire him from X Force the characters later appeared in Youngblood and their own title as The Berzerkers the incident only further motivated him to pursue independent publishing 6 9 Liefeld soon invited Amazing Spider Man artist Erik Larsen Guardians of the Galaxy artist Jim Valentino and McFarlane to join Image Comics McFarlane then recruited Jim Lee at the Sotheby s auction in New York in December 1991 Wolverine artist Marc Silvestri who was also in town for the event was also invited 6 Lee invited Uncanny X Men artist Whilce Portacio shortly after 10 These seven creators became the original founding partners of Image Comics Image s organizing charter had two key provisions 11 12 Image would not own any creator s work the creator would Image itself would own no intellectual property except the company trademarks its name and its logo 13 No Image partner would interfere creatively or financially with any other partner s work Early years edit The founders initial titles were produced under the Image name but published through Malibu Comics which provided administrative production distribution and marketing support 14 The first Image comic published was Liefeld s Youngblood 1 in April 1992 Pre orders for the book reached 930 000 copies beating the previous record for both the top selling creator owned comic and top selling independent comic of all time 15 16 The second Image title McFarlane s Spawn 1 debuted with a print run of 1 7 million copies in May 1992 Larsen s The Savage Dragon Lee s WildC A T S Valentino s ShadowHawk and Silvestri s CyberForce followed all with strong sales to comic shops 17 Within a few months Malibu had almost 10 of the North American comics market share thanks to Image 18 briefly exceeding that of industry giant DC Comics 19 In early 1993 Image left Malibu and established itself as an independent company hiring Tony Lobito as full time publisher 20 21 Image became the first publishing company to challenge Marvel and DC s dominance since the establishment of the direct market 22 Portacio was the only founder not to deliver the first issue of his own series in 1992 Initially Portacio was reported to be working on a title called Huntsman with Chris Claremont but opted instead to create his own title called Wetworks the Huntsman character later appeared in issues of WildC A T S and CyberForce written by Claremont 17 However work on the series was significantly delayed due to the death of Portacio s sister and he decided to resign as an Image partner 23 In 2022 former Incredible Hulk artist Dale Keown said that he was approached in 1992 about taking Portacio s place but declined because his criminal record made it difficult to travel outside his home country of Canada 24 Keown still became the first non founder to publish a creator owned title with Image The first issue of his series Pitt sold more than one million copies to comic shops It was originally scheduled for November 1992 but shipped several months late 17 Image continued to expand in 1993 with new titles from both founders such as Liefeld s Bloodstrike and Lee s StormWatch and non founders including Sam Kieth s The Maxx Larry Stroman s Tribe Keith Giffen s Trencher and Mike Grell s Shaman s Tears 25 and 1963 by Alan Moore Steve Bissette and Rick Vietch 26 Tribe became the largest selling African American created comic with more than one million copies sold to comic shops 27 Moore went on to work on several Image series including Spawn WildC A T S The Maxx and Supreme Also in 1993 Image and Valiant Comics began publishing the inter company crossover Deathmate which comics historian Jason Sacks described it as the first major comic universe crossover since the Marvel DC crossover The Uncanny X Men and The New Teen Titans was published in 1982 28 Some of the founders studios came to resemble separate publishers 6 each with several ongoing series set in a shared universe 29 The use of freelancers to write or illustrate series that were owned by the Image partners led to criticism that some of them had reproduced the very system they had rebelled against but with them in charge instead of a corporation 6 30 Many Image series quickly fell behind their intended publishing schedule See Controversies below In response retailers cut orders to reduce their risk 31 In August 1993 Image cut back its line citing lateness and a desire to focus on books by the founders 32 The company announced it had canceled Shaman s Tears Stupid Trencher and Tribe and that several mini series including 1963 and Pitt would not become ongoing series Moore s Enemies of Mankind and Frank Miller s Big Guy were indefinitely postponed 32 In late 1993 Image hired Larry Marder an independent cartoonist and former marketer for Chicago comics retail chain Moondog to act as executive director for the publisher ranking above Lobito and reporting directly to the partners 33 McFarlane told The Comics Journal that the founders had ignored Lobito s advice in the past even when he was correct because they didn t have confidence in his guidance because of his age and relative inexperience 33 Despite the scale back in 1993 Image continued to publish creator owned comics by a variety of creators Though many Image titles sold more than 500 000 copies per issue in 1992 and 1993 by mid 1994 only the top selling titles reached 250 000 in sales 34 Marder determined that Image needed to publish at least 30 comic books per month to stay in business And if the partners did not provide those books I had to get those books wherever I could find them Marder explained in 2007 27 Titles added in the mid 1990s included Hellshock by Jae Lee Groo by Sergio Aragones Bone by Jeff Smith A Distant Soil by Colleen Doran and Astro City by Kurt Busiek Brent Anderson and Alex Ross 35 In 1996 Lee founded a new sub imprint called Homage Comics under his WildStorm Studios label Described as a home for creator owned material as well as a safe haven from an increasingly challenging comic book market the initial line up consisted of Astro City Terry Moore s previously self published Strangers in Paradise and a new title called Leave it to Chance by James Robinson and Paul Smith 36 The Image founders also continued to produce new top selling series such as Gen13 from WildStorm Studios in 1994 and Witchblade and The Darkness from Silvestri s Top Cow Productions in 1995 and 1996 respectively 37 In 1998 WildStorm launched the commercially successful Cliffhanger sub imprint to showcase created owned titles from a new generation of popular artists starting with Humberto Ramos J Scott Campbell Joe Madureira 38 Partial break up edit There were tensions between the Image Comics founders from the very beginning according to Liefeld as the founders competed with each other for sales and talent Liefeld founded his own separate company Maximum Press in late 1994 largely in response to those tensions and a realization that he wouldn t always be a part of Image he told CBR in 2001 39 At the time Maximum Press was announced he had described it as an imprint for non superhero titles such as the science fantasy Warchild 40 Liefeld proposed a merger between his Extreme Studios imprint and Silvestri s Top Cow imprint in 1996 according to Matt Hawkins who worked for Liefeld s studios from 1993 until 1998 and has been president of Silvestri s Top Cow Productions since 1998 Hawkins said that when Liefeld realized that Silvestri was going to reject his offer he decided instead to try to recruit some of Top Cow s artists including Witchblade artist Mike Turner At one point Hawkins called Turner about working on an Avengelyne project for Maximum Press but Silvestri took the phone and yelled at Hawkins 41 Meanwhile Liefeld moved some of his titles from Image Comics to Maximum Press escalating tensions within the company 39 In the summer of 1996 shortly after the incident with Turner and Hawkins Silvestri announced that he would leave Image Comics citing irreconcilable differences with a then unnamed Image partner 42 Liefeld resigned from Image Comics in September 1996 shortly before a vote to force him out of the company 43 44 45 Silvestri reversed his plans to leave Image shortly after 44 Liefeld filed suit against Image in October 1997 for wrongful termination and breach of contract for money he claimed was owed to him Image counter sued claiming Liefeld had misused Image funds and staff resources for his Maximum Press titles and failed to repay an overpayment made by the company The suits were settled in February 1997 Terms of the settlement were not disclosed but Marder and Valentino claimed Liefeld repaid the company the money he owed 46 Liefeld later reconciled with the Image partners and returned to the company as a creator as opposed to partner in 2007 47 Jim Lee sold WildStorm and its characters to DC Comics in 1998 48 49 citing a desire to exchange his responsibilities as a publisher for the opportunity to do more creative work 50 Diversification edit nbsp A panel of non founding Image creators at the 2010 New York Comic Con l r Tomm Coker Tim Seeley Ben McCool James Zhang Nick Spencer and Ron Marz Image continued to diversify adding titles such as Brian Michael Bendis s Jinx and Matt Wagner s Mage to the company s line up in 1997 while Valentino s Shadowline imprint published more than 12 black and white titles including his own A Touch of Silver James A Owen s Starchild Zander Cannon s The Replacement God Mike Baron s The Badger and Michael Avon Oeming s Ship of Fools Creators paid a flat fee of 2 000 to Image and 500 to Shadowline for administrative costs and kept all other proceeds from their sales as well as all intellectual property rights 51 After Marder left Image in 1999 to help run McFarlane Toys 52 Valentino was named the company s publisher 53 He later said he saw his time as publisher as an extension of what he had been doing with Shadowline 54 He is often credited for making Image Comics into the diverse publisher that it is seen as today 55 Sacks wrote that by the end of 1999 Image had bolstered its reputation as the place to find the highest quality creator owned material 56 In the early 2000s a number of imprints not owned by the Image partners began publishing licensed material through Image Devil s Due launched a new G I Joe series via Image in 2001 MVCreations launched a new Masters of the Universe series in 2002 Udon Entertainment began publishing a series based on the Street Fighter video game franchise in 2003 and the imprint DB Productions began publishing an adaptation of George R R Martin s The Hedge Knight also in 2003 57 Image Comics hired Eric Stephenson who had worked as an editor and writer for Liefeld s Extreme Studios in the early days of Image as marketing directory in 2002 58 59 In 2003 Image published Robert Kirkman and Tony Moore s zombie comic The Walking Dead which went on to become one of the top selling comics on the market 60 Valentino originally rejected the title fearing the premise was too familiar Kirkman lied and said he planned to reveal that the aliens were behind the zombies a premise Stephenson found interesting enough to encourage Valentino to accept Kirkman later admitted that he never planned to include aliens in the comic 61 Other titles published during Valentino s tenure include Kirkman and Cory Walker s Invincible Bendis s Powers Garth Ennis Jimmy Palmiotti and Amanda Conner s The Pro Jay Faerber s Noble Causes and Warren Ellis and Chris Weston s Ministry of Space 62 Image s market share declined in the mid 2000s as the imprints Devil s Due Dreamwave Productions MVCreations Udon Entertainment and DB Productions departed the company and Dark Horse Comics surpassed Image to become the third largest comic book publisher Larsen took over as publisher in 2004 intending to publish more mainstream comics 63 Valentino returned to running the Shadowline imprint 54 Titles launched during Larsen s tenure include Ellis and Ben Templesmith s Fell Casey and Tom Scioli s Godland Richard Starkings s Elephantmen Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie s Phonogram and The Sword by the Luna Brothers In 2007 Liefeld returned to Image as a creator as opposed to partner to publish a new Youngblood series written by Joe Casey with art by Derec Donovan and Val Staples Liefeld credited Kirkman for bringing him back to Image 47 Larsen stepped down as publisher to focus more on The Savage Dragon in July 2008 and Stephenson was promoted to the position 64 Eric Stephenson era edit Shortly after Stephenson s appointment Image added Robert Kirkman as the company s first new partner since its founding 65 Kirkman s black and white series The Walking Dead was at that time already a long running and popular series it would run for 193 issues and serve as the basis for three television series and his series Invincible was one of the longest running series featuring a superhero created in the early 2000s it would run for 144 issues Kirkman created an imprint under his direction known as Skybound 66 Starting in 2009 Image began to greatly expand both the types of comics it publishes and the types of creators drawn to the publisher 67 beginning a period of critical acclaim Among its award winning series are Chew Morning Glories Fatale The Manhattan Projects and Saga Saga creator Brian K Vaughan explained why he chose Image to publish that series I love all the other companies I ve worked with but I think Image might be the only publisher left that can still offer a contract I would consider fully creator owned Saga is a really important story to me so I wanted a guarantee of no content restrictions or other creative interference and I needed to maintain 100 control and ownership of all non publishing rights with the artist including the right to never have our comic turned into a movie or television show or whatever 68 The Beat named Stephenson the Comics Industry Person of the Year in 2012 for what editor in chief Heidi MacDonald described as Stephenson s creative revitalization of Image 69 MacDonald cited the publication of Saga and other new titles from popular creators like Grant Morrison Jonathan Hickman and Ed Brubaker along with homegrown hits from Image like Chew Mornings Glories and Thief of Thieves and Stephenson s own Nowhere Men among his accomplishments Image s sales grew significantly during this period 70 to a market share of around 10 in 2015 71 and an influx of Marvel and DC associated creators began publishing creator owned work with them 72 As a result Image was voted Diamond Comic Distributors Publisher of the Year Over 4 three years in a row between 2013 and 2015 73 By this time a clear majority of titles Image published in a given month were non studio productions Meanwhile McFarlane s Spawn and related titles his McFarlane Toys line Silvestri s Top Cow imprint and Kirkman s various series remained a substantial segment of Image s total sales As of 2020 update McFarlane s Spawn and Larsen s Savage Dragon were the longest running creator owned titles published by Image with over 300 and 250 issues respectively The company s headquarters moved from Berkeley California to Portland Oregon in 2017 71 The following year Stephenson became an Image partner board member and chief creative officer 59 74 Prior to Berkeley its headquarters was located first in Anaheim California and then in Oakland California 75 In November 2021 members of the editorial production sales and accounting staff formed Comic Book Workers United CBWU a trade union affiliated with the Communications Workers of America however Image did not voluntarily recognize the union 76 77 When it was certified by a vote in January 2022 it became the first such union in the American comics industry 78 79 CBWU ratified their first union contract with Image Comics in March 2023 80 81 Controversies editLate shipping and the speculative bubble burst edit Image Comics became notorious for shipping products late After a peak in early 1993 the comics market experienced a steep downturn as the speculative bubble burst Around 20 of all comic book stores went out of business in 1993 industry analyst Mel Thompson estimated compared to the typical attrition rate of around 10 in prior years Many comics industry professionals blamed speculators for the market downturn but many retailers cited Image s erratic publishing record as a key cause of fiscal strain for stores 82 Every single Image comic scheduled to ship in the first quarter of 1993 shipped late 83 In April 1993 only 15 3 of the company s titles shipped on time compared with 90 1 shipped on time by DC 79 2 by Marvel and 100 by Valiant 84 Some titles ended up shipping out of sequence For example the first issue of Liefeld s on going Brigade series shipped before the concluding issue of the Brigade limited series 85 and Spawn 21 shipped before issues 19 and 20 86 Deathmate Red Liefeld s portion of the inter company crossover with Valiant Comics became emblematic of Image s problems The book shipped four months late well after the release of the series epilogue 28 Retailers typically order comics two months in advance on a non returnable basis Late books create cash flow issues for retailers and in many cases fans lost interest in late books by the time they shipped Retailers estimated that late shipping could affect sales by as much as 60 according to The Comics Journal Late books also make it harder for retailers to plan purchases because they have to order the next issues in a series before they see how well the earlier issues sold When books start shipping late you end up ordering four five six issues before you see sales and that s where the greater danger is Hanley s Universe owner Jim Hanley told The Comics Journal in 1994 87 Todd McFarlane told The Comics Journal that the blame for the market collapse should not be pinned entirely on Image He argued that the company shared responsibility with other publishers distributors and retailers alike saying that Image shipping books on time wouldn t stop retailers from being stupid 88 In a Comics Retailer interview McFarlane blamed the industry downturn on greed saying he hoped that retailers who over ordered popular titles including Spawn went bankrupt 89 Based on public orders and shipping data The Comics Journal and Thompson concluded that because Image titles accounted for such a large percentage of both late books and dollars spent the company was more culpable for the situation than the Image partners were willing to admit 90 In 2007 comics journalist George Khoury wrote that Marvel s decision to distribute its product exclusively through its own distribution subsidiary beginning in 1995 had a bigger long term impact on the comics industry than Image s business practices Diamond Distributors founder Steve Gepp told Khoury that Image helped expand the market for comic books and Mile High Comics proprietor Chuck Rozanski pointed to the return of Superman less than six months after the Death of Superman as the moment the speculative bubble burst Khoury concluded that everyone in the industry was to blame for the comics market crash including publishers speculators readers retailers creators and editors 91 Many consider Deathmate the comic book that singlehandedly put an end to the industry s prosperous times and the biggest reason why so many comic book stores closed its doors for good comics historian Jason Sacks wrote in 2018 In truth there was plenty of blame to go around 28 List of imprints editThis list also includes studios and partners Image considers these studios as separate publishing companies that operate in concert with Image and each studio as fully autonomous from Image Central 92 Current edit 12 Gauge Comics Arancia Studio Black Market Narrative Giant Generator Ghost Machine 93 Highbrow Entertainment Robert Kirkman LLC Skybound Entertainment Skybound Games Howyaknow LLC Todd McFarlane Productions McFarlane Toys Top Cow Productions Shadowline Skybound Entertainment Syzygy Publishing 94 Former edit Devil s Due Publishing Dreamwave Productions Extreme Studios Gorilla Comics Millarworld WildStorm America s Best ComicsAccolades editImage Comics titles have garnered both comics and mainstream critical acclaim Image Comics titles boast multiple award nominations and wins across all categories in the Eisner Awards Hugo Awards Russ Manning Awards The Edgar Awards Bram Stoker Awards Young Adult Library Association s Great Graphic Novels for Teens and more Image Comics title list includes domestic and international bestsellers with regular appearances on The New York Times bestseller list The Washington Post s bestseller list USA Today s bestseller list the Amazon com bestseller list and more In July 2018 Marjorie Liu won the Eisner Award for Best Writer for her work on Monstress making her the first woman in history to win in the category 95 In April 2019 Image Comics titles received a total of 30 Eisner Award nominations more than any other nominated publisher and made history as the first publisher to sweep the Best New Series category 96 with all six titles nominated published by Image See also edit nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portal nbsp Companies portal nbsp Comics portal Energon Universe Image Universe Massive Verse List of Image Comics publications List of unproduced Image Comics projects List of television series and films based on Image Comics publicationsNotes edit a b Alverson Brigid May 24 2023 Image Goes Exclusive with Lunar for Direct Market Distribution ICv2 Retrieved May 24 2023 Our Publishers Archived from the original on September 11 2017 Retrieved September 10 2017 IMAGE SIGNS EXCLUSIVE BOOK DISTRIBUTION DEAL WITH S amp S Retrieved August 6 2023 IMAGE SIGNS EXCLUSIVE BOOK DISTRIBUTION DEAL WITH S amp S Retrieved August 6 2023 Alverson Brigid October 16 2023 Comic Store Market Shares Q3 2023 icv2 com Retrieved October 31 2023 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 p 12 36 a b c d e Dean Michael October 25 2000 The Image Story The Comics Journal Archived from the original on September 8 2007 Retrieved March 15 2008 Khoury 2007 p 50 Dean Michael October 25 2000 The Image Story The Comics Journal Archived from the original on September 8 2007 Retrieved March 15 2008 Kanalz Hank July 1991 New Mutants No More Comic Scene Spectacular USA Starlog Communications p 10 Howe Sean 2013 Marvel Comics the Untold Story USA HarperCollins pp 330 331 ISBN 9780062314697 Howe Sean October 13 2013 Excerpted from Marvel Comics The Untold Sean Howe s Tumblr Youngblood vol 1 no 2 July 1992 Image Comics Berzerkers vol 1 no 1 August 1995 Image Comics Khouri Andy July 27 2007 CCI Image Comics The Founders Archived January 26 2021 at the Wayback Machine CBR com The Image Story The Comics Journal 2005 10 25 Retrieved on 2008 03 15 Erik Larsen Grand Larseny printed in the back of various Image titles February 2008 Larsen Erik November 15 2011 The Ask Erik Thread Image Comics Archived from the original on April 26 2012 Bye Bye Marvel Here Comes Image Portacio Claremont Liefeld Jim Lee Join McFarlane s New Imprint at Malibu The Comics Journal 148 11 12 February 1992 Johnston Rich February 26 2012 The Not Quite Secret Origin Of Image Comics bleedingcool com Archived from the original on April 2 2019 Retrieved August 27 2015 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 p 62 First Image Comics Title Sets Record The Comics Buyer s Guide February 21 1992 p 22 a b c Sacks amp Dallas 2018 pp 62 67 NewsWatch Malibu Commands 9 73 Market Share The Comics Journal 151 July 1992 p 21 Malibu Moves Ahead of DC in Comics Market The Comics Journal 152 August 1992 pp 7 8 Image Leaves Malibu Becomes Own Publisher The Comics Journal 155 22 January 1993 Cunningham Brian January 1994 The Most Influential People in the Comic Book Industry Wizard The Comics Magazine No 29 USA Garab Shamus Enterprises p 100 Industry sales records in 1993 shadowed by collapse of speculator boom The Comics Journal 166 February 1994 p 40 Cynthia de Castro December 7 2008 Whilce Portacio The man behind the X Men Asian Journal Archived from the original on October 31 2010 AFTERLIFE WITH NASSER 175 DALE KEOWN INTERVIEW YouTube com Event occurs at 14 15 Retrieved April 17 2022 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 pp 91 93 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 pp 95 96 a b Khoury 2007 p 215 a b c Sacks amp Dallas 2018 pp 96 98 Johnston Richard February 14 2020 SCOOP Return Of The Image Comics Shared Superhero Universe and Time to Start Hoarding Savage Dragon bleedingcool com Retrieved July 13 2023 The Creator s Bill of Rights A Chat with Steve Bissette Archived from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved November 17 2011 Reynolds 1994 p 27 a b Image cuts back The Comics Journal 161 27 August 1993 a b Newswatch Larry Marder Joins Image The Comics Journal 166 February 1994 p 40 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 p 153 Jae Lee Khoury 2007 p 233 Groo Astro City Bone A Distant Soil Sacks amp Dallas 2018 p 154 188 192 218 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 pp 217 218 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 pp 252 253 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 p 253 Senreich Matthew February 1 1998 Cliffhanger Wizard The Comics Magazine USA Garab Shamus Enterprises 1998 Comic Book Sales to Comics Shops Comichron Retrieved May 23 2023 a b C B R Staff July 30 2001 To the Extreme A conversation with Rob Liefeld CBR Retrieved August 30 2023 Extreme Unveils Maximum Imprint Hero Illustrated No 16 USA Warrior Publications October 1994 p 19 Khoury 2007 p 159 Lacey John B August 1996 Marc Silvestri Leaves Image Wizard The Comics Magazine No 60 USA Garab Shamus Enterprises p 18 Rob Liefeld on his career in comics and its accompanying controversies The Comics Journal 195 April 1997 p 27 a b Sacks amp Dallas 2018 p 219 Chapter Three Image Litigation Cont The Comics Journal 192 December 1996 pp 17 19 News Watch Image Liefeld Settle Lawsuit if not their Differences The Comics Journal 195 April 1997 p 12 a b Rob Liefeld Talks Youngblood s Return to Image Newsarama August 1 2007 Archived from the original on February 1 2009 D C Comics ready to ride WildStorm Variety September 3 1998 Retrieved May 22 2023 Itzkoff Dave February 19 2010 Heroes of DC Comics Get Ready for Closeup The New York times Retrieved May 22 2023 Tantimedh Adi February 25 2006 New York Comic Con Day One Jim Lee Spotlight Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on December 27 2013 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 pp 238 239 Khoury 2007 pp 154 155 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 p 272 a b Harper David September 14 2011 Multiversity Comics Presents Jim Valentino Multiversity Comics Retrieved July 27 2023 A Touch of Image An interview with Jim Valentino CBR February 1 2002 Retrieved July 27 2023 Jim Valentino s Shadowhawk Year One Sequart Organization Retrieved July 27 2023 Johnston March 1 2022 Jim Valentino s The Last ShadowHawk From Image Comics In August 2022 bleedingcool com Retrieved July 27 2023 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 p 273 The G I Joe Revival That Was Very 80s And Very Y2K CBR September 5 2022 Retrieved July 27 2023 Image s Masters of the Universe Revival Wasn t Exactly Classic He Man CBR July 18 2021 Retrieved July 27 2023 Street Fighter takes the fight to Devil s Due CBR November 24 2003 Retrieved July 27 2023 Chivalry Isn t Dead The Hedge Knight 2 CBR August 8 2003 Retrieved July 27 2023 Eric Stephenson Joins Image icv2 com Retrieved August 1 2023 a b Comments Jude Terror Last updated February 15 2018 Eric Stephenson Promoted to Image Comics Board of Directors bleedingcool com Retrieved August 1 2023 Comichron 2004 Comic Book Sales to Comics Shops www comichron com Retrieved July 27 2023 The Walking Dead Was the Best Selling Graphic Novel of the Decade The Walking Dead Retrieved July 27 2023 MacDonald Heidi January 12 2017 The Walking Dead 163 is the biggest selling comic in nearly 20 years The Beat Retrieved July 27 2023 Comic Legends The Big Lie That Launched The Walking Dead CBR October 23 2017 Retrieved July 27 2023 Khoury 2007 p 137 Erik Larsen Takes Over as Image Publisher icv2 com Retrieved July 27 2023 Brady Matt July 9 2008 Eric Stephenson Talking to the New Image Publisher Archived November 21 2008 at the Wayback Machine Newsarama July 9 2008 WW Chicago Larsen Steps Down as Image Publisher Stephenson Steps Up CBR June 28 2008 Retrieved July 27 2023 Brady Matt July 22 2008 Robert Kirkman Named Image Partner Archived November 20 2008 at the Wayback Machine Newsarama Armitage Hugh July 20 2010 Robert Kirkman launches Skybound imprint Archived April 26 2017 at the Wayback Machine Digital Spy Hennum Shea March 12 2015 What Spawn Means to the Future of Image Archived April 26 2017 at the Wayback Machine Paste Uzumeri David March 14 2012 Saga Brian K Vaughan and Fiona Staples Bring a Stellar Sci Fi Comic Into the World Archived January 9 2016 at the Wayback Machine ComicsAlliance MacDonald Heidi January 11 2013 Announcing the 2012 Comics Industry Person of the Year Eric Stephenson The Beat Retrieved September 2 2023 Miller John Jackson 2016 Market Shares of Comics Sold to Coimic Shops Archived December 16 2013 at the Wayback Machine Comichron Retrieved April 25 2017 a b Scott Aaron September 1 2016 Image Comics To Move To Portland Oregon Public Broadcasting Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 17 2016 Meylikhov Matthew September 16 2013 The Shifting Landscape of Creator Owned Comics Archived February 21 2014 at the Wayback Machine Multiversity Comics Diamond Comic Distributors Inc Diamond Announces 2015 Gem Award Winners Archived from the original on October 30 2020 Retrieved June 20 2019 Image Comics Adds Publisher Eric Stephenson to Board of Directors CBR February 16 2018 Retrieved August 1 2023 Image Comics is relocating to Portland OR Comics Beat McMillan Graeme November 22 2021 The Comic Book Industry s Next Page Turner Union Organizing The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved January 7 2022 Reid Calvin November 8 2021 Image Comics Moves to Hold Union Vote Publishers Weekly Retrieved January 7 2022 Image Comics Workers Have Officially Certified Their Groundbreaking Union Gizmodo January 6 2022 Retrieved January 7 2022 Image Comics Workers Win Union Election in Historic First for Comics Industry Vice January 6 2022 Retrieved January 7 2022 Adolphus Emell Derra March 3 2023 Image Comics Union Ratifies First Contract Publishers Weekly Retrieved March 6 2023 Alverson Brigid March 2 2023 Image Comics Union Ratifies Contract ICv2 Retrieved March 6 2023 Khoury 2007 p 172 Reynolds 1994 p 27 Catron J Michael July 1993 CBRI Other Worlds Confront Image The Comics Journal 161 26 27 Sacks amp Dallas 2018 p 92 Reynolds 1994 p 32 Brigade vol 1 no 4 July 1993 Image Comics Brigade vol 2 no 1 May 1993 Image Comics krisis March 9 2023 New for Patrons Guide to Brigade Crushing Krisis Retrieved July 10 2023 Spawn vol 1 no 21 May 1994 Image Comics See issues 19 and 20 not out yet Tom Reynolds 1994 pp 27 33 Reynolds 1994b p 25 Reynolds 1994 p 32 Reynolds 1994 pp 31 32 Khoury 2007 pp 71 79 Frequently Asked Questions imagecomics com Gustines George Gene October 12 2023 A Comic Book Upstart Seeks to Shake Up the Industry The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 12 2023 Joe Hill s Rain To Launch New Syzygy Imprint from Image Comics ScreenRant October 21 2021 Retrieved December 15 2021 A Woman Has Finally Won the Top Writing Award in Comic Books Time Archived from the original on April 21 2019 Retrieved June 14 2019 Eisner Awards Current Info Comic Con International San Diego December 17 2014 Archived from the original on June 7 2017 Retrieved June 14 2019 References editSacks Jason Dallas Keith 2018 American Comic Book Chronicles 1990s USA TwoMorrows Publishing ISBN 9781605490847 Khoury George June 2007 Image Comics The Road To Independence TwoMorrows Publishing ISBN 1 893905 71 3 excerpts McFarlane and Khoury on 15 Years of Image Comics Archived October 13 2007 at the Wayback Machine Comic Book Resources June 13 2007 Marc Silvestri from Image Comics The Road to Independence Newsarama June 14 2007 Dale Keown excerpt from Image Comics The Road to Independence June 14 2007 Image Comics at the Grand Comics Database Image Comics Big Comic Book DataBase Reynolds Eric February 1994 Industry Sales Records in 1993 Shadowed by Collapse of Speculator Boom The Comics Journal 166 Reynolds Eric February 1994b Capital Announces Controversial Penalty Fees for Publishers The Comics Journal 166 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Image Comics Official website nbsp Image Comics at the Comic Book DB archived from the original Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Image Comics amp oldid 1221519228, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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