Gary Frank (comics)

Gary Frank (born 1969) is a British comics artist, notable for pencilling on Midnight Nation and Supreme Power, both written by J. Michael Straczynski.

[2] Gary Frank began his professional career in 1991, illustrating covers and interior short stories for publications such as Doctor Who Magazine and Toxic!.

[4] It was on that series that he began a long-running collaboration with inker Cam Smith, who would continue to ink Frank's work for many years.

[4] In 1997, Frank and Smith moved to Image Comics, where they, along with writer John Arcudi, were hired as the new creative team on the Wildstorm title Gen13,[5] beginning with the epilogue story in issue No.

Kin, a six-issue miniseries created, written and penciled by Frank, was published under Image's Top Cow imprint.

who discovers that a race of neanderthal men exists in the mountains of Alaska and proceed to eliminate them to obtain their technology, which developed differently from that of the rest of the world.

agent Trey McAloon, is opposed to the agency's plans and confronts them about it, while the book's other main character, Alaskan Park Ranger Elizabeth Leaky, establishes contact with one of the neanderthals.

Frank served as penciller on Straczynski's Midnight Nation,[5] a 12-issue limited series published by Top Cow from 2000 to 2002 under their now-defunct Joe's Comics imprint.

One of the inkers on the series was Jon Sibal, with whom Frank would begin a long-running artistic collaboration that continues to this day.

During his run on Supreme Power, Frank provided covers for a diverse number of Marvel series such as Silver Surfer No.

[14][15] In 2012, Frank and Johns collaborated on Batman: Earth One, an original graphic novel set on Earth-one of the DC Multiverse.

[19] Since 2017, Johns and Frank have worked together on Doomsday Clock, a limited series featuring Superman and Doctor Manhattan.

[22][23] Frank's inaugural work for the company was drawing Geiger: Ground Zero, a two-issue series written by Johns that serves as a prequel to their 2021 miniseries of the same name.

Frank's artwork was featured during the finale of the TV series Smallville when the character Chloe Sullivan is shown reading a Superman comic book to her son.