Lino Landolfi Explained

Lino Landolfi (6 April 1925 – 11 February 1988) was an Italian cartoonist.

Born in Rome, Landolfi attended various art schools including the Accademia where he studied painting, sculpture, decorating and scenery.[1] He debuted as a cartoonist in 1947 with the character of "Joe", published by Corriere dei Piccoli.[1] In 1951 he created his most popular character, Procopio, realized for the magazine Il Vittorioso until 1968.[1] In 1968, he changed his usual graphic style for a critically appreciated grotesque-realistic version of Don Quixote published by Vitt.[1] [2]

In 1969 he started a collaboration with the children magazine Il Giornalino, for which Landolfi, in addition to having made several comic adaptations from literary such as Gulliver's Travels and Father Brown, co-created with writer Claudio Nizzi the popular "Piccolo Dente", leading character of a long lasting eponym comic strip.[1] [2]

References

  1. Book: Gianni Brunoro. Quel fantastico mondo: padri, figli, padrini, padroni e padreterni del fumetto italiano. Dedalo, 1984. 8822045076. 142–143.
  2. Book: Ferruccio Giromini. Gulp!: 100 anni a fumetti. Electa, 1996. 176.