Whilce Portacio
Whilce Portacio | |
---|---|
Born | William Portacio July 8, 1963 Sangley Point, Cavite City, Philippines |
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Penciller, Inker, Writer |
Pseudonym(s) | Whilce Portacio |
Notable works | Iron Man Punisher Spawn Stone Uncanny X-Men Wetworks |
http://whilcedesk.blogspot.com/ |
William "Whilce" Portacio (born July 8, 1963)[1] is a Filipino-American comic book writer and artist noted for his work on such titles as The Punisher, X-Factor, Uncanny X-Men, Iron Man, Wetworks and Spawn. Portacio was also one of the seven co-founders of Image Comics,[2][3] though he did not become a partner in the company.[4]
Early life
Whilce Portacio was born in Sangley Point, Cavite City, Philippines. He grew up in places such as Midway Island and New Mexico before his family settled in San Diego, California. He began reading comic books at the age of ten, when his neighbor decided to get rid of her husband's collection, and through this, he discovered the work of creators such as Jack Kirby and Neal Adams, who were the two most important influences on Portacio's art. Though Portacio dreamed of becoming an astronaut, his height and eyesight did not meet the necessary requirements, which determined that art would be his vocation. In high school, he continued to create his own comic books with his longtime friend, Scott Williams, who would one day be a prolific comic book inker in the industry.[5]
Career
Portacio attended his first comic book convention in San Diego, where Marvel Comics editor Carl Potts, after seeing Portacio's portfolio, offered him the job inking over Frank Cirocco and Chris Warner's pencils on the 1984 series Alien Legion.[5] The following year, he inked over Art Adams' pencils on the 1985 miniseries Longshot.
Later he was given assignments as a penciller as well. Portacio became noted for his work on such titles as The Punisher, X-Factor, and The Uncanny X-Men, for which he co-created the character Bishop with John Byrne and Jim Lee.
In 1992, Portacio left Marvel to co-found Image Comics with six other high-profile artists. He quickly withdrew from Image due to his sister's illness. He eventually published his title Wetworks through Jim Lee's Wildstorm imprint in 1994. Other notable series that Portacio worked on include Stone and Marvel's controversial Heroes Reborn storyline within Iron Man.
Stan Lee interviewed Portacio in the documentary series The Comic Book Greats.
In August 2000, Portacio fell into a diabetic coma as a result of a failing pancreas. He woke up a week later, thirty pounds lighter, and unable to walk, stand or even draw. Only six months later was he able to pick up a pencil and draw. According to his blog, "My mind could see what I wanted to draw but my hand couldn't accomplish it."[6]
In 2006, Portacio returned to his artistic duties at Wildstorm on Wetworks vol. 2, which was being written by Mike Carey. Portacio left the book with issue #6. He also began art duties on the monthly DC Comics series Batman Confidential.
On June 9, 2008, it was announced that Portacio would be the new artist on Spawn starting in October 2008 with issue #185, providing pencils with Spawn creator Todd McFarlane returning as co-writer with Brian Holguin as the new creative team.
Following his run on Spawn he has done more work with Marvel. He contributed pencils to Hulk #18 in 2008,[7] and will be contributing pencils to an upcoming issue of The Uncanny X-Men.[8]
This article needs to be updated.(July 2016) |
Bibliography
DC
- Authority, vol. 2, #14 (2004)
- Authority, vol. 3, #6 (2005)
- Batman Confidential #1-6 (2007)
- Batman: Gotham Knights (Batman Black and White) #47 (2004)
- Coup D'Etat: The Authoritiy (2004)
- Eye of the Storm Annual #1 (2003)
- Stormwatch: Team Achilles #1-10 (2002–03)
- Superman/Batman #57-59 (2009)
- Wetworks #1-3 (2006–07)
Image/Top Cow
- Artifacts, limited series, #5-8 (2011)
- Darkness #84 (2010)
- Deathmate #Black (among other artists) (1993)
- Non Humans, miniseries, #1-4 (2012–13)
- Image United #1-3 (2009-2010)
- Spawn #185-192, 194-195, 197 (2008-2009)
- Stone #1-4 (1998-1999)
- Stone, vol. 2 #1-4 (1999-2000)
- Tales of the Darkness #1-2 (1998)
- Wetworks #1-4, 8, 11-12, 14 (1994–96)
Marvel
- Daredevil Annual #5 (1989)
- Hulk, vol. 3, #18 (2009)
- Incredible Hulk, vol. 3, #2 (along with Marc Silvestri and Billy Tan), 5-7 (2011–12)
- Iron Man, vol. 2, #1-3, 7-8, 11 (1996–97)
- Journey into Mystery #628 (2011)
- Legion of Night #1-2 (1991)
- New Avengers, vol. 2, #18 (2011)
- Prelude to Deadpool Corps, miniseries, #2 (2010)
- Power Pack #46 (1989)
- Punisher #8-18 (1988–89)
- Strange Tales (Cloak & Dagger) #12 (1988)
- Strikeforce: Morituri #1, 10, 16 (1986–88)
- Stryfe's Strike File, one-shot (among other artists) (1993)
- Uncanny X-Men (full art): #267, 281-286, 289-290, 522, 526 (1990–92, 2010); (along with Leonard Kirk): #527 (2010)
- X-Factor #63-69 (1991)
- X Force (full art): #102-105; (along with Paco Medina): #106, 108 (2000)
Notes
- ^ Miller, John Jackson (June 10, 2005). "Comics Industry Birthdays". Comics Buyer's Guide. Archived from the original on October 29, 2010. Retrieved December 12, 2010.
- ^ Richard George and Jesse Schedeen. (April 5, 2010) "Whilce Portacio Joins Uncanny X-Men". IGN.
- ^ "Whilce Portacio on Spawn with McFarlane". Newsarama. June 9, 2008
- ^ "Who are the Image founders?" "Frequently Asked Questions". Image Comics. Retrieved October 25, 2010
- ^ a b Whilce Portacio at Dragon Con; Accessed October 25, 2010.
- ^ Whilce Portacio (December 6, 2006). "Wetworks:The Creative Process". Retrieved April 30, 2007.
- ^ Hulk #18 solicitation at Marvel.com; Accessed October 25, 2010.
- ^ "Advance X-Solicitations, March 2010" Comic Book Resources; December 21, 2009
References
- Whilce Portacio on Marvel.com
External links
- Portacio's Blog on Wetworks: The Creative Process
- Whilce Portacio at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
- Whilce Portacio on Spawn with MacFarlane June 9, 2008