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Sandu Florea

Sandu Florea (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈsandu ˈflore̯a]; born 28 June 1946) is a Romanian-American comic book and comic strip creator, also known as an inker and book illustrator. A trained architect and a presence on the science fiction scene during the 1970s, he became a professional in the comics genre with albums such as Galbar, and was allegedly the only artist to have obtained a steady income in this way during the communist period. A prolific contributor to Romanian children's magazines, Florea had his activity curbed by communist censorship when he first publicized his intention of emigrating to the United States. He eventually left the country shortly after the 1989 Revolution, and soon after began collaborating with Marvel, DC Comics and other leading enterprises in the field of comic book publishing. He became especially noted for his activities as an inker, with contributions on series such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Executioner, X-Men: The End, Batman R.I.P. and Batman: Battle for the Cowl.

Sandu Florea
Florea at the 2011 New York Comic Con.
Born (1946-06-28) 28 June 1946 (age 77)
Ghelari, Romania
NationalityRomanian, American
Area(s)inker, writer
Notable works
Batman R.I.P., Batman: Battle for the Cowl, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, The Executioner, X-Men: The End
AwardsEurocon (1980)

Florea has maintained enduring contacts with his native country, and has taken an initiative in popularizing the American comic book style in Romania. He has been described as one of the most successful among his colleagues, and claimed to be one of the most recognizable Romanians in his field.

Biography edit

Early life and career in Romania edit

 
Scene from Galbar (1973)

Born in Ghelari, Hunedoara County, Sandu Florea first became interested in comics while in fifth grade, his first contact with the medium being through a copy of the French youth magazine Pif Vaillant.[1] This encounter, he recalled in a 2004 interview, left him with "an impression that cannot be erased", and "the wish that I myself could draw such appealing and interesting characters."[1]

Sandu Florea published his first comic strip in 1968, with Luminiţa children's magazine. It was a series centered on the anecdotal hero classic Păcală.[2] In 1971, Florea graduated from Bucharest's Architectural College, and subsequently worked for a building design institute in his adoptive city of Timișoara.[1] Before graduation, he had also published his first work in the comics genre, inspired by the folkloric tale of Păcală, and featured in a 1968 issue of Luminiţa magazine.[1]

After moving to Timișoara, he became a noted presence among the local science fiction fan base, joining the H. G. Wells Literary Club founded by writer Ovidiu Şurianu.[1] Their collaboration produced the 1973 Galbar, reportedly the first Romanian science fiction comic book.[1][3] In 1975, he and Timișoara native Marcel Luca published what is thought to be the first-ever Romanian coloring book with a science fiction subject, Vreau să fiu cosmonaut ("I Want to be a Cosmonaut"), which reputedly sold 45,000 copies.[1] By then, having received offers of collaboration from two publishing houses (Editura Ion Creangă and Editura Facla), Florea settled back in Bucharest and focused exclusively on his work in comics and illustration.[1][2] Said to have been the most prolific comic book author active during the communist period, he had his work featured in almost all of the children's periodicals in print at the time.[2][3]

During the late 1970s and early 1980s, he was creating and publishing comic books dedicated to popular legends, such as a retake on Ion Creangă's fantasy story Harap Alb, or recounting episodes in Romanian history (involving Dacian rulers Burebista and Decebalus, Roman Emperor Trajan,[3][4] and Wallachian Prince Michael the Brave).[3] Several single-issue albums in this category were based on texts by historical fiction author Radu Theodoru, forming part of the series Strămoşii ("The Ancestors").[5] The full list includes: Cavalerul alb ("The White Knight"; Editura Facla, 1976), Călugăreni (referencing the Battle of Călugăreni; Editura Ion Creangă, 1977), Misiune de sacrificiu ("Suicidal Mission"; Editura Ion Creangă, 1979), În lumea lui Harap Alb ("Inside Harap Alb's World"; Editura Sport-Turism, 1979), Burebista, regele dacilor ("Burebista, King of the Dacians"; Editura Sport-Turism, 1980), Decebal şi Traian ("Decebalus and Trajan"; Editura Sport-Turism, 1981), Carusel ("Carousel"; Editura Sport-Turism, 1982), Sarmizegetusa eroică ("Heroic Sarmizegetusa"; Editura Sport-Turism, 1983).[3] Florea was also involved in creating Romania's own Western comics, adapted from stories by Nicolae Frînculescu.[2]

These works received critical attention, both in Romania and abroad. În lumea lui Harap Alb earned him the a Eurocon award (1980).[3][5][6] This, literary critic Michael Hăulică notes, made Florea one in a final wave of Romanian Eurocon laureates to have emerged under communism (also including writers Vladimir Colin, Ion Hobana and Gheorghe Săsărman).[6]

Florea also received attention from celebrated poet Nichita Stănescu, who discovered in Carusel an unclassifiable and imaginative work. The writer argued: "[Florea] introduces mystery where we usually had happy-endings, imagination where there was lyricism and an indecisive epic where there was nothing. The book he calls Carusel [...] is without precedent, in Romania and everywhere else."[7] In 1982, Stănescu began working with him on the album Semne şi desemne ("Signs and Designs"). Florea printed the lithographs to go with the poems, but the project was cut short when Stănescu died (December 1983).[7]

In the United States edit

The 1984-1989 interval was described by Florea as "one of the most difficult periods in my life."[1] Having unsuccessfully demanded from communist authorities the right of leaving for the United States, where two of his siblings had already settled, Florea was exposed to political persecution, and the censorship apparatus lifted his right to publish, prompting him to contribute several comic strips under various pseudonyms.[1] He returned to public attention after the 1989 Revolution, when he was briefly editor in chief of the new children's magazine Carusel.[2][3][5] With Frînculescu, he also founded another such publication, called Proteus.[2][3]

Sandu Florea, his wife and two children eventually left for the United States in 1991, moving to New York City[1] and afterward settling in Long Island.[8] Although initially discouraged by the competition among comic book artists, Florea recounts, he decided to contact Marvel recruiters within three months of his arrival, submitting a sample of his take on Conan the Barbarian.[1] According to his own statement, Conan proved compatible with his talents: "[he was] the only Marvel character who did not fly, did not breathe fire and did not use psychic waves to defeat his enemies, being instead armed with a giant sword and axe. Since I had been drawing many historical tales back in the old country, Conan was a character whom I could depict in drawing with relative ease."[1]

He was accepted by Marvel soon after this, specialized as an inker, and began working on several of its main releases, including, alongside Conan, The Amazing Spider-Man and the various spin-offs of Avengers, Blackwulf, Elektra, Mighty Thor, Captain America, Doctor Strange, Fantastic Four and X-Men.[1][3][5][8] He also worked with DC Comics (on Superman Second Series,[1] Batman,[1][4][8] Justice Society of America, Nightwing)[8] and Dark Horse Comics,[3][4] signing additional collaborations with Innovation Publishing, Vivid Comics (on The Executioner)[3] and Chaos! Comics (Lady Death, Undertaker).[8] Among the significant miniseries to which he contributed as an inker are X-Men: The End (2004–2006),[1] Batman R.I.P. (2008),[4][8] and Batman: Battle for the Cowl (2009).[8] His work with Dark Horse included Buffy the Vampire Slayer[3][5][8] and Angel.[8] His artistic production also touched other media: Florea created storyboards and other graphics for the motion picture producers Full Moon, as well as book illustrations for The Princeton Review.[8]

2000s initiatives edit

 
Looking over an aspiring artist's portfolio at the 2011 New York Comic Con.

Florea was selected honorary president of the Romanian Association of Comic Book Fans in 2001.[2] Speaking in 2004, he expressed interest in relaunching the native comic book genre in his native country, and in publishing a new children's periodical with original content.[1] In 2006, he participated in the relaunch of Carusel, in a version argued by Hăulică to have been "professional under any definition."[9]

The publication, which went out of print after only two issues due to distribution problems, included Romanian-language reprints of American comics such as Conan the Barbarian and Aliens, alongside original collaborations between Florea and his Romanian colleagues: Două paloşe ("Two Backswords", with Florea as artist and György Györfi-Deák as writer), Ultima frontieră ("The Final Frontier", text by Florea, Marian Mirescu and Eddie Pandele, drawings by Daniel Rizea and Cătălin Gospodin), Toxic (text by Florea, drawings by Tudor Popa), Leviathan (written by Cristian Lăzărescu, illustrated by Florea).[9][10] The magazine also featured Borderland, a comic series conceived especially for a Romanian public by writer John Warner and illustrated by Florea, depicting the confrontation between three worlds: of the Mortals, of Magic and of the Demons.[10] Around the same time, Sandu Florea also began contributing to various Romanian webzines, such as Pro-Scris, Imagikon and Paradox—the latter of which published his strip Fortăreaţa, based on a short story by Ovidiu Bufnilă.[10] Several aspects related to the artist's new Romanian ventures were however criticized by Michael Hăulică. He argued that Toxic in particular was "weak and obvious", and noted that, in its featured edition, the text of Borderland evidenced its translator's poor command of the Romanian language.[10]

These initiatives helped cement the artist's reputation in Romania. Sandu Florea claims to be "The only Romanian professional graphic artist who has managed to make a living exclusively out of his drawings, in the old country as well as [...] in America."[1] Dodo Niţă, a historiographer of Romanian comics and Florea's colleague at Carusel,[10] placed În lumea lui Harap Alb as fifth among an all-time chart of original Romanian works in the genre.[11] According to a 2008 piece in the Romanian daily Evenimentul Zilei, Florea shares the distinction of "best known Romanian comic book artist" with Mircea Arapu, the latter being known for his contribution in Francophone comics.[12]

An annual Romanian comic book fan convention in Constanţa awards the Sandu Florea Prize to artists with a long contribution in their field.[2][13] In 2010, Florea was guest of honor at the European Comic Strip Salon, organized by the Romanian Cultural Institute (ICR) at the National Theater Bucharest.[2] He exhibited his work, including the never before seen Semne şi desemne collection, at the Bucharest "Comic Book Museum" exhibit, jointly organized by the ICR and the Belgian Comic Strip Center in 2011.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s (in Romanian) Petrina Calabalic, "Cartoon Man" 2011-10-08 at the Wayback Machine, in Bănăţeanul, 6 December 2004
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i (in Romanian) Artistul Sandu Florea la Salonul European de Bandă Desenată, Romanian Cultural Institute release; retrieved 23 November 2011
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l (in Romanian) "Florea, Sandu", entry in Editura Nemira's Dicţionar SF, 1999 (republished by Pro-Scris webzine); retrieved 16 August 2009
  4. ^ a b c d (in Romanian) Cosmin Popan, "Batman, omorât în complicitate cu un român"[permanent dead link], in Cotidianul, 26 November 2008
  5. ^ a b c d e "Sandu Florea (Romania)", entry in Lambiek's Comiclopedia; retrieved 16 August 2009
  6. ^ a b (in Romanian) Michael Hăulică, "Fantasy & Science Fiction. Premiile care au fost", in Observator Cultural, Nr. 290, October 2005
  7. ^ a b c (in Romanian) D. S., "Poezie BD: un proiect Nichita Stănescu – Sandu Florea prinde viaţă la Muzeul Benzii Desenate", Hotnews.ro, 26 August 2011; retrieved 23 November 2011
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j (in Romanian) Dodo Niţă, "Batman R.I.P." Archived 2009-03-06 at archive.today, in Editura Nemira's Nautilus, March 2009
  9. ^ a b (in Romanian) Michael Hăulică, "Fantasy & Science Fiction. Ah, BD!", in Observator Cultural, Nr. 315, April 2006
  10. ^ a b c d e (in Romanian) Michael Hăulică, "Fantasy & Science Fiction. BD", in Observator Cultural, Nr. 273, June 2005
  11. ^ (in Romanian) Ioana Calen, "Cărtărescu e tras în bandă - Provocarea desenată"[permanent dead link], in Cotidianul, 13 June 2006
  12. ^ (in Romanian) Adrian Grama, Vlad Stoicescu, "Rahan şi Pif, scăpaţi de comunism", in Evenimentul Zilei, 28 June 2008
  13. ^ (in Romanian) George Onofrei, "Lucian Amarii a cîştigat Premiul Sandu Florea pentru BD. JUP caută pentru benzile desenate editori curajoşi şi fără prejudecăţi" 2009-09-12 at the Wayback Machine, in Polirom's Suplimentul de Cultură, Nr. 203, November 2008

External links edit

  • Sandu Florea at the Grand Comics Database
  • at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  • Contributions by and about Sandu Florea, in Pro-Scris webzine

sandu, florea, romanian, pronunciation, ˈsandu, ˈflore, born, june, 1946, romanian, american, comic, book, comic, strip, creator, also, known, inker, book, illustrator, trained, architect, presence, science, fiction, scene, during, 1970s, became, professional,. Sandu Florea Romanian pronunciation ˈsandu ˈflore a born 28 June 1946 is a Romanian American comic book and comic strip creator also known as an inker and book illustrator A trained architect and a presence on the science fiction scene during the 1970s he became a professional in the comics genre with albums such as Galbar and was allegedly the only artist to have obtained a steady income in this way during the communist period A prolific contributor to Romanian children s magazines Florea had his activity curbed by communist censorship when he first publicized his intention of emigrating to the United States He eventually left the country shortly after the 1989 Revolution and soon after began collaborating with Marvel DC Comics and other leading enterprises in the field of comic book publishing He became especially noted for his activities as an inker with contributions on series such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer The Executioner X Men The End Batman R I P and Batman Battle for the Cowl Sandu FloreaFlorea at the 2011 New York Comic Con Born 1946 06 28 28 June 1946 age 77 Ghelari RomaniaNationalityRomanian AmericanArea s inker writerNotable worksBatman R I P Batman Battle for the Cowl Buffy the Vampire Slayer The Executioner X Men The EndAwardsEurocon 1980 Florea has maintained enduring contacts with his native country and has taken an initiative in popularizing the American comic book style in Romania He has been described as one of the most successful among his colleagues and claimed to be one of the most recognizable Romanians in his field Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and career in Romania 1 2 In the United States 1 3 2000s initiatives 2 References 3 External linksBiography editEarly life and career in Romania edit nbsp Scene from Galbar 1973 Born in Ghelari Hunedoara County Sandu Florea first became interested in comics while in fifth grade his first contact with the medium being through a copy of the French youth magazine Pif Vaillant 1 This encounter he recalled in a 2004 interview left him with an impression that cannot be erased and the wish that I myself could draw such appealing and interesting characters 1 Sandu Florea published his first comic strip in 1968 with Luminiţa children s magazine It was a series centered on the anecdotal hero classic Păcală 2 In 1971 Florea graduated from Bucharest s Architectural College and subsequently worked for a building design institute in his adoptive city of Timișoara 1 Before graduation he had also published his first work in the comics genre inspired by the folkloric tale of Păcală and featured in a 1968 issue of Luminiţa magazine 1 After moving to Timișoara he became a noted presence among the local science fiction fan base joining the H G Wells Literary Club founded by writer Ovidiu Surianu 1 Their collaboration produced the 1973 Galbar reportedly the first Romanian science fiction comic book 1 3 In 1975 he and Timișoara native Marcel Luca published what is thought to be the first ever Romanian coloring book with a science fiction subject Vreau să fiu cosmonaut I Want to be a Cosmonaut which reputedly sold 45 000 copies 1 By then having received offers of collaboration from two publishing houses Editura Ion Creangă and Editura Facla Florea settled back in Bucharest and focused exclusively on his work in comics and illustration 1 2 Said to have been the most prolific comic book author active during the communist period he had his work featured in almost all of the children s periodicals in print at the time 2 3 During the late 1970s and early 1980s he was creating and publishing comic books dedicated to popular legends such as a retake on Ion Creangă s fantasy story Harap Alb or recounting episodes in Romanian history involving Dacian rulers Burebista and Decebalus Roman Emperor Trajan 3 4 and Wallachian Prince Michael the Brave 3 Several single issue albums in this category were based on texts by historical fiction author Radu Theodoru forming part of the series Strămosii The Ancestors 5 The full list includes Cavalerul alb The White Knight Editura Facla 1976 Călugăreni referencing the Battle of Călugăreni Editura Ion Creangă 1977 Misiune de sacrificiu Suicidal Mission Editura Ion Creangă 1979 In lumea lui Harap Alb Inside Harap Alb s World Editura Sport Turism 1979 Burebista regele dacilor Burebista King of the Dacians Editura Sport Turism 1980 Decebal si Traian Decebalus and Trajan Editura Sport Turism 1981 Carusel Carousel Editura Sport Turism 1982 Sarmizegetusa eroică Heroic Sarmizegetusa Editura Sport Turism 1983 3 Florea was also involved in creating Romania s own Western comics adapted from stories by Nicolae Frinculescu 2 These works received critical attention both in Romania and abroad In lumea lui Harap Alb earned him the a Eurocon award 1980 3 5 6 This literary critic Michael Hăulică notes made Florea one in a final wave of Romanian Eurocon laureates to have emerged under communism also including writers Vladimir Colin Ion Hobana and Gheorghe Săsărman 6 Florea also received attention from celebrated poet Nichita Stănescu who discovered in Carusel an unclassifiable and imaginative work The writer argued Florea introduces mystery where we usually had happy endings imagination where there was lyricism and an indecisive epic where there was nothing The book he calls Carusel is without precedent in Romania and everywhere else 7 In 1982 Stănescu began working with him on the album Semne si desemne Signs and Designs Florea printed the lithographs to go with the poems but the project was cut short when Stănescu died December 1983 7 In the United States edit The 1984 1989 interval was described by Florea as one of the most difficult periods in my life 1 Having unsuccessfully demanded from communist authorities the right of leaving for the United States where two of his siblings had already settled Florea was exposed to political persecution and the censorship apparatus lifted his right to publish prompting him to contribute several comic strips under various pseudonyms 1 He returned to public attention after the 1989 Revolution when he was briefly editor in chief of the new children s magazine Carusel 2 3 5 With Frinculescu he also founded another such publication called Proteus 2 3 Sandu Florea his wife and two children eventually left for the United States in 1991 moving to New York City 1 and afterward settling in Long Island 8 Although initially discouraged by the competition among comic book artists Florea recounts he decided to contact Marvel recruiters within three months of his arrival submitting a sample of his take on Conan the Barbarian 1 According to his own statement Conan proved compatible with his talents he was the only Marvel character who did not fly did not breathe fire and did not use psychic waves to defeat his enemies being instead armed with a giant sword and axe Since I had been drawing many historical tales back in the old country Conan was a character whom I could depict in drawing with relative ease 1 He was accepted by Marvel soon after this specialized as an inker and began working on several of its main releases including alongside Conan The Amazing Spider Man and the various spin offs of Avengers Blackwulf Elektra Mighty Thor Captain America Doctor Strange Fantastic Four and X Men 1 3 5 8 He also worked with DC Comics on Superman Second Series 1 Batman 1 4 8 Justice Society of America Nightwing 8 and Dark Horse Comics 3 4 signing additional collaborations with Innovation Publishing Vivid Comics on The Executioner 3 and Chaos Comics Lady Death Undertaker 8 Among the significant miniseries to which he contributed as an inker are X Men The End 2004 2006 1 Batman R I P 2008 4 8 and Batman Battle for the Cowl 2009 8 His work with Dark Horse included Buffy the Vampire Slayer 3 5 8 and Angel 8 His artistic production also touched other media Florea created storyboards and other graphics for the motion picture producers Full Moon as well as book illustrations for The Princeton Review 8 2000s initiatives edit nbsp Looking over an aspiring artist s portfolio at the 2011 New York Comic Con Florea was selected honorary president of the Romanian Association of Comic Book Fans in 2001 2 Speaking in 2004 he expressed interest in relaunching the native comic book genre in his native country and in publishing a new children s periodical with original content 1 In 2006 he participated in the relaunch of Carusel in a version argued by Hăulică to have been professional under any definition 9 The publication which went out of print after only two issues due to distribution problems included Romanian language reprints of American comics such as Conan the Barbarian and Aliens alongside original collaborations between Florea and his Romanian colleagues Două palose Two Backswords with Florea as artist and Gyorgy Gyorfi Deak as writer Ultima frontieră The Final Frontier text by Florea Marian Mirescu and Eddie Pandele drawings by Daniel Rizea and Cătălin Gospodin Toxic text by Florea drawings by Tudor Popa Leviathan written by Cristian Lăzărescu illustrated by Florea 9 10 The magazine also featured Borderland a comic series conceived especially for a Romanian public by writer John Warner and illustrated by Florea depicting the confrontation between three worlds of the Mortals of Magic and of the Demons 10 Around the same time Sandu Florea also began contributing to various Romanian webzines such as Pro Scris Imagikon and Paradox the latter of which published his strip Fortăreaţa based on a short story by Ovidiu Bufnilă 10 Several aspects related to the artist s new Romanian ventures were however criticized by Michael Hăulică He argued that Toxic in particular was weak and obvious and noted that in its featured edition the text of Borderland evidenced its translator s poor command of the Romanian language 10 These initiatives helped cement the artist s reputation in Romania Sandu Florea claims to be The only Romanian professional graphic artist who has managed to make a living exclusively out of his drawings in the old country as well as in America 1 Dodo Niţă a historiographer of Romanian comics and Florea s colleague at Carusel 10 placed In lumea lui Harap Alb as fifth among an all time chart of original Romanian works in the genre 11 According to a 2008 piece in the Romanian daily Evenimentul Zilei Florea shares the distinction of best known Romanian comic book artist with Mircea Arapu the latter being known for his contribution in Francophone comics 12 An annual Romanian comic book fan convention in Constanţa awards the Sandu Florea Prize to artists with a long contribution in their field 2 13 In 2010 Florea was guest of honor at the European Comic Strip Salon organized by the Romanian Cultural Institute ICR at the National Theater Bucharest 2 He exhibited his work including the never before seen Semne si desemne collection at the Bucharest Comic Book Museum exhibit jointly organized by the ICR and the Belgian Comic Strip Center in 2011 7 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s in Romanian Petrina Calabalic Cartoon Man Archived 2011 10 08 at the Wayback Machine in Bănăţeanul 6 December 2004 a b c d e f g h i in Romanian Artistul Sandu Florea la Salonul European de Bandă Desenată Romanian Cultural Institute release retrieved 23 November 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l in Romanian Florea Sandu entry in Editura Nemira s Dicţionar SF 1999 republished by Pro Scris webzine retrieved 16 August 2009 a b c d in Romanian Cosmin Popan Batman omorat in complicitate cu un roman permanent dead link in Cotidianul 26 November 2008 a b c d e Sandu Florea Romania entry in Lambiek s Comiclopedia retrieved 16 August 2009 a b in Romanian Michael Hăulică Fantasy amp Science Fiction Premiile care au fost in Observator Cultural Nr 290 October 2005 a b c in Romanian D S Poezie BD un proiect Nichita Stănescu Sandu Florea prinde viaţă la Muzeul Benzii Desenate Hotnews ro 26 August 2011 retrieved 23 November 2011 a b c d e f g h i j in Romanian Dodo Niţă Batman R I P Archived 2009 03 06 at archive today in Editura Nemira s Nautilus March 2009 a b in Romanian Michael Hăulică Fantasy amp Science Fiction Ah BD in Observator Cultural Nr 315 April 2006 a b c d e in Romanian Michael Hăulică Fantasy amp Science Fiction BD in Observator Cultural Nr 273 June 2005 in Romanian Ioana Calen Cărtărescu e tras in bandă Provocarea desenată permanent dead link in Cotidianul 13 June 2006 in Romanian Adrian Grama Vlad Stoicescu Rahan si Pif scăpaţi de comunism in Evenimentul Zilei 28 June 2008 in Romanian George Onofrei Lucian Amarii a cistigat Premiul Sandu Florea pentru BD JUP caută pentru benzile desenate editori curajosi si fără prejudecăţi Archived 2009 09 12 at the Wayback Machine in Polirom s Suplimentul de Cultură Nr 203 November 2008External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sandu Florea Sandu Florea at the Grand Comics Database Sandu Florea at the Comic Book DB archived from the original Contributions by and about Sandu Florea in Pro Scris webzine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sandu Florea amp oldid 1196845647, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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