Nate Powell

Nate Powell

Powell at a signing for March Book One at Midtown Comics in Manhattan.
Born 1978
Little Rock, Arkansas
Nationality American
Area(s) Cartoonist, Writer, Penciller, Inker, Publisher, Letterer, Colourist
Notable works
Any Empire
Swallow Me Whole
The Silence Of Our Friends
Awards Ignatz Award, 2008 & 2009
Eisner Award, 2009
http://seemybrotherdance.org

Nate Powell (born 1978, Little Rock, Arkansas) is a graphic novelist and musician.

Early life

Nate Powell was born in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1978.[1]

Career

Powell began self-publishing comics in 1992 at age 14. He graduated from North Little Rock High School in 1996, and briefly attended George Washington University in Washington, DC. He transferred to the School of Visual Arts (SVA) in New York City, where he majored in Cartooning. Beginning in 2005, while at SVA, he would send Chris Staros and Brett Warnock, the founders of Top Shelf Productions, copies of every book he made.[2] He graduated in 2000 after receiving the Outstanding Cartooning Student award and the Shakespeare & Company Books Self-Publishing Grant, with which he funded the first issue of Walkie Talkie.

Nate Powell owned DIY punk record label Harlan Records and performed in several punk bands including Universe, Divorce Chord, WAIT, and Soophie Nun Squad.

From 1999 to 2009, he worked as a caregiver for adults with developmental disabilities.[3]

His 2008 graphic novel Swallow Me Whole won the Ignatz Award for Outstanding Debut and Outstanding Artist, and was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in the Young Adult Fiction category. It received the 2009 Eisner Award for Best Original Graphic Novel, and was also nominated for Best Writer/Artist and Best Lettering.

In the early 2010s, Powell learned that Top Shelf would be publishing March, an autobiographical graphic novel trilogy about the life of civil rights leader and United States Congressman John Lewis, which had already been written by Lewis and his colleague, Andrew Aydin. A few weeks later, Powell was contacted by Chris Staros, who suggested he try out for the assignment. Although he already had other projects lined up, Powell sent some demo pages to Lewis and Aydin, who over the course of their subsequent correspondence realized that Powell would be well-suited for the job. Although Powell had illustrated stories that were "true to life," such as the 2012 graphic Silence of our Friends, this would be the first time he would depict real-life historical figures, 300 of which Powell estimates are rendered in total in the trilogy. The scene in which Lewis meets Martin Luther King, Jr. for the first time was the first page Powell drew for March, and although he found approaching that page difficult, says it made subsequent depictions of real-life people easier. Powell's approach was to develop a visual shorthand for each real person he had to draw, in the form of a "master drawing" to act as a reference template for that person's features, one that emphasized the person's skull structure, in lieu of referring constantly to photo reference in the course of the project, so that the characters would not look "too stale or photo-derived." He employed lifestyle and illustration books from the 1950s and 1960s, as well as Google searches, to depict fashion and automobiles of given time periods accurately. Lewis says he found Powell's renditions of scenes from his early life "very moving."[2] Top Shelf published March Book One in November 2013.

Powell has worked on the graphic novel adaptation of Rick Riordan's The Heroes of Olympus: The Lost Hero, while working on his own next book, entitled Cover and the short comics collection You Don't Say.

On May 15, 2014, Powell was present at that year's commencement ceremony for his alma mater, the School of Visual Arts, when the school presented an Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts to Powell's March collaborator, John Lewis. The second volume of March is scheduled for January 2015 release.[4]

Personal life

Powell lived intermittently in central Arkansas while calling East Lansing, Michigan, South Hadley Falls, Massachusetts, and Providence, Rhode Island home from 2001 to 2003. He settled in Bloomington, Indiana in early 2004.

Bibliography

Discography

With Soophie Nun Squad (1992-2007)

With Boomfancy (2000-2001)

With Gioteens (1999-2001)

With W A I T (2005-2007)

With Divorce Chord (2007-2008)

With Universe (2008-2010)

Other appearances

References

  1. "Bio". Nate Powell. seemybrotherdance.org. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
  2. 1 2 Herbowy, Greg (Fall 2014). "Q+A: Congressman John Lewis, Andrew Aydin & Nate Powell". Visual Arts Journal. pp. 48 - 51
  3. Powell, Nate (November 10, 2008). "Fluorescent Misfunction". PowellsBooks.Blog.
  4. Rhodes, David (Fall 2014). "From the President". Visual Arts Journal. p. 3

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nate Powell.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 16, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.