Chris Weston
Chris Weston | |
---|---|
Born |
January 1969 Rinteln, West Germany |
Nationality | British |
Area(s) | Writer, Penciller, Inker, Colourist |
Notable works |
Indigo Prime The Filth Ministry of Space |
chrisweston |
Chris Weston (born 1969) is a British comics artist who has worked both in the US and UK comics industries.
Biography
Weston was born in January 1969 in Rinteln, Germany, and lived in various countries as a child. His career began when he was apprenticed for a year to work with Don Lawrence, by the end of which he had secured paid work on the major British strip Judge Dredd.
He worked with writer John Smith on the ten-part Indigo Prime story, "Killing Time" in which characters battled Jack the Ripper aboard a time travelling train.
Weston's work in America began with on Swamp Thing during Mark Millar's time as scriptwriter. He has since gone on to be published in The Invisibles,[1] Starman, JSA, Lucifer, and The Authority.
He has also worked on The Filth and Ministry of Space. The former a creator-owned written by Grant Morrison, the latter a "what if?" limited series written by Warren Ellis which saw Britain winning the Space Race.[2]
Most recently he has provided the art for Fantastic Four: First Family.
In 2008 Weston illustrated The Twelve, a twelve-issue limited series written J. Michael Straczynski.[3][4] The series will involve a team formed from Timely Comics characters including The Witness, The Black Widow and Elektro.[5]
Since 2005 Weston has written a number of stories that he has also drawn, including a number of one-offs for 2000 AD and The Twelve: Spearhead a prequel one-shot.[6]
Bibliography
Interior comic work includes:
- 2000 AD (anthology, Fleetway/Rebellion):
- Judge Dredd:
- "A Night at the Circus" (with John Wagner, in #596, 1988)
- "Worms" (with Alan Grant, in #598, 1988)
- "Accident Prone" (with Alan Grant, in #602, 1988)
- "Tyger, Tyger..." (with Alan Grant, in #607, 1988)
- "Crazy Barry, Little Mo" (with John Wagner, in #615-618, 1989)
- "The (Great) Little U-Front Disaster" (with John Wagner, in #641, 1989)
- "The Vidders" (with Garth Ennis, in #749, 1991)
- "To Thing with Love" (with John Wagner, in #956, 1995)
- "Rest Stop" (with Gordon Rennie, in #1194, 2000)
- "The Death of Dan-E Cannon" (script and art, in #1800, 2012)
- "The Heart is a Lonely Klegg Hunter" (with Rob Williams, in #1888-1889, 2014)
- Tharg's Future Shocks:
- "Amanda" (with Jim Campbell, in #623, 1989)
- "The God Fish" (with Mike Collins, in #636, 1989)
- "House of the Future" (with Chris Gormley, in #637, 1989)
- "Whatever Happened to the Green Pedestrian Palm?" (script and art, in Prog 2010, 2009)
- Inside Moves (with John Smith, in #631, 1989)
- Rogue Trooper:
- "The Hit Conclusion" (with Steve Dillon, in Winter Special '89, 1989)
- "Decoys" (with Michael Fleisher, in Rogue Trooper Annual '91, 1990)
- "Enfleshings" (with John Smith, in Yearbook '93, 1992)
- "Shock Tactics" (with John Smith, in Sci-Fi Special '93, 1993)
- "Scavenger of Souls" (with Michael Fleisher, in #873-880, 1994)
- "G.I. Blues" (with Mark Millar, in #901-903, 1994)
- "Hill 392" (with Steve White, in Poster Prog #4, 1994)
- Indigo Prime (with John Smith, in #678, 680-682, Winter Special '90 and 735-744, 1989–1991)
- Nemesis the Warlock: "Bride of the Warlock" (with Pat Mills, in Winter Special '92, 1992)
- Robo-Hunter: "Something for the Weekend, Sir?" (with John Smith, in Sci-Fi Special '92, 1992)
- Tales of MC-1: "Animal House" (with John Smith, in Sci-Fi Special '92, 1992)
- Canon Fodder:
- "Canon Fodder" (with Mark Millar, in #861-867, 1993)
- "Dark Matter" (with Kek-W, in #980-987, 1996)
- Vector 13: "Case One: Side Step" (with Dan Abnett, in #1062, 1997)
- Nikolai Dante: "Russia's Greatest Love Machine" (with Robbie Morrison, in #1066, 1997)
- Downlode Tales: "City on Fire" (with Dan Abnett, in #1155-1160, 1999)
- Pulp Sci-Fi: "Feast of Skin" (with John Smith, in #1163, 1999)
- Tharg's Terror Tales: "Counts as One Choice" (script and art, in #1645, 2009)
- Judge Dredd:
- Swamp Thing v2 #153: "Twilight of the Gods" (with Mark Millar, Vertigo, 1995)
- The Invisibles v1 #10 and v2 #9, 14-17, 19-22 and v3 #3 (with Grant Morrison, Vertigo, 1995–2000)
- Time Breakers #1-5 (with Rachel Pollack, Helix, 1997)
- The Dreaming #25: "My Year as a Man" (with Peter Hogan, Vertigo, 1998)
- Star-Spangled Comics: "...A Terrifying Hour!" (with Geoff Johns, one-shot, DC Comics, 1999)
- Starman v2 #55: "Taxi Cab Confessions" (with David S. Goyer, James Robinson, Peter Snejbjerg and John McCrea, DC Comics, 1999)
- Stars and S.T.R.I.P.E. #0: "A Chilly Day in Opal" (with Geoff Johns, James Robinson and Lee Moder, 1999)
- JSA Secret Files #1: "History 101" (with Ron Marz, co-feature, DC Comics, 1999)
- Lucifer v1 #1-3: "A Six-Card Spread" (with Mike Carey, Vertigo, 2000)
- The Authority v1 #18-19: "Earth Inferno" (with Mark Millar, Wildstorm, 2000)
- Flinch #15: "Watchful" (with Lucius Shepard, anthology, Vertigo, 2000)
- Ministry of Space #1-3 (with Warren Ellis, Image, 2001–2004)
- Enemy Ace: War in Heaven #1 (with Garth Ennis, DC Comics, 2001)
- War Story: Johann's Tiger (with Garth Ennis, one-shot, Vertigo, 2001)
- The Filth #1-13 (with Grant Morrison, Vertigo, 2002–2003)
- Judge Dredd Megazine (anthology, Rebellion):
- Judge Dredd:
- "Wharever Happened to Tweak?" (with Pat Mills, in #214, 2004)
- "Six" (with John Wagner, in #221-222, 2004)
- Judge Dredd:
- Tom Strong's Terrific Tales #11-12 (with Steve Moore, anthology, America's Best Comics, 2004)
- Event Horizon Volume 1: "Heinrich Manoeuvre's H.E.A.D Trip!" (script and art, anthology graphic novel, Mam Tor, 2005)
- Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight v1 #197-199: "Blaze of Glory" (with Will Pfeifer, DC Comics, 2006)
- Fantastic Four: First Family #1-6 (with Joe Casey, Marvel, 2006)
- American Splendor v2 #2 and v3 #1 (with Harvey Pekar, anthology, Vertigo, 2006/2008)
- Four Feet from a Rat #1-4: "The Little Guy" (with Mother, anthology, Mam Tor, 2008)
- The Twelve (Marvel):
- The Twelve #1-12 (with J. Michael Straczynski, 2008–2012)
- The Twelve: Spearhead (script and art, one-shot, 2010)
- Rocketeer Adventures v1 #2: "It Ain't the Fall That Kills Ya..." (with Mark Waid, anthology, IDW Publishing, 2011)
- Adventures of Superman v2 #12: "Savior" (with Rob Williams, digital, DC Comics, 2013)
- Batman: Black and White v2 #5: "I Killed the Bat!" (with Blair Butler, anthology, DC Comics, 2014)
Covers only
- Zzap!64 #70, 72 (Newsfield Publications, 1991)
- The Best of 2000 AD #91 (Fleetway, 1993)
- 2000 AD #925, 1383, 1650, 1760, 1771, 1776, 1782, 1837 (Fleetway/Rebellion, 1995–2013)
- Judge Dredd Megazine #215, 231, 325 (Rebellion, 2004–2012)
- Elephantmen #5 (Comicraft, 2007)
- The Twelve #0 (Marvel, 2008)
- The Phantom Patrol tpb (Book Palace, 2009)
- Superman: Last Stand of New Krypton #3 (DC Comics, 2010)
- Judge Dredd: Anderson, PSI-Division #1 (IDW Publishing, 2014)
- Big Trouble in Little China #1 (Boom! Studios, 2014)
- Chrononauts #1 (Image, 2015)
Notes
- ↑ Irvine, Alex (2008), "The Invisibles", in Dougall, Alastair, The Vertigo Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, pp. 92–97, ISBN 0-7566-4122-5, OCLC 213309015
- ↑ Irvine, Alex (2008), "Filth", in Dougall, Alastair, The Vertigo Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, p. 83, ISBN 0-7566-4122-5, OCLC 213309015
- ↑ The Gold, the Bad, and the Ugly: Weston Talks "The Twelve", 26 July 2007, Comic Book Resources
- ↑ SDCC '07: MARVEL'S THE TWELVE REVEALED, Newsarama
- ↑ Mystery Men's Dozen: Brevoort Talks "The Twelve", 26 July 2007, Comic Book Resources
- ↑ Phegley, Kiel (12 March 2010), Chris Weston: Spearheading The Twelve's Return, Comic Book Resources, retrieved 21 March 2010
References
- Chris Weston at the Comic Book DB
- Chris Weston at Barney
External links
- Official website at the Wayback Machine (archived 18 December 2014)
- Personal blog
- Profile for Channel 4 Ideasfactory at the Wayback Machine (archived 31 October 2006)
Interviews
- Chris Weston Interview, 2000ADReview, 4 March 2003 at the Wayback Machine (archived 16 March 2012)
- Chris Weston: The Interview by Adriano Barone, Drive Magazine, 20 March 2004