Mike Huddleston Explained

Pencil:y
Ink:y
Color:y
Notable Works:The Coffin,
Deep Sleeper,
Butcher Baker, the Righteous Maker,
The Strain Trilogy

Mike Huddleston is an American comic book artist.

Biography

Huddleston started working in comics in the mid-1990s at the age of 21, doing creator-owned projects for Spoon Ink and Caliber, as well as some work for DC Comics, including a short run on Deathstroke with Marv Wolfman up until the title's cancellation. He later called this initial two-year stint a "false start", which prompted him to leave mainstream comics to join Jim Mahfood's 40 Oz Comics studio.[1] Huddleston returned in 2000 with the creator-owned The Coffin for Oni Press, written by Phil Hester. Since then, Huddleston worked for independent publishers, Marvel and DC Comics, as well as latter's Vertigo and Wildstorm imprints, including lengthy runs on Harley Quinn with A. J. Lieberman and Gen13 with Scott Beatty and creator-owned mini-series such as Mnemovore with Ray Fawkes and Hans Rodionoff and Deep Sleeper, again with Phil Hester.

His latest assignment was Butcher Baker, the Righteous Maker, a creator-owned project at Image with Joe Casey on writing duties.[2] [3] The critically acclaimed series ended with issue #8, which was published on August 15, 2012, ten months after issue #7, a delay that Casey stated was due to Huddleston's having overcommitted himself. Huddleston responded to Casey's public statement by stating that the delay was caused by his need to take other work in order to make sufficient money, as Butcher Baker was not lucrative enough for him to avoid doing so. Huddleston further explained that he apologized to Casey and to fans for the delay.[4] [5]

From 2011 to 2015 Huddleston worked as the artist of the comic adaptation of Guillermo del Toro's The Strain trilogy with David Lapham as the writer and del Toro as the consultant.[6] [7] Reportedly, del Toro liked Huddleston's approach to design so much that it influenced the way he approached the eventual TV adaptation of the book, as well as the overall development of The Strain universe.[8] [9]

Bibliography

Interior comic work includes:

"Rubicon" (script and art, with Mike Hoogterp and Bryan Wade, one-shot, Spoon Ink, 1994)

"American Dream" (with Mark Waid, anthology graphic novel, Marvel, 2002)

"Funk" (with Joe Casey, anthology graphic novel, Image, 2005)

"Connecting" (with Erin Malysa, anthology graphic novel, Adhouse Books, 2007)

"Chapter One" (with Marc Andreyko, anthology graphic novel, Wildstorm, 2009)

Covers only

Notes and References