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Toggle Comic books subsection. 1.1 Anthology series. ... This is a list of comic books, comic strips, and webcomics that feature anthropomorphic animals. Comic books
Barbara Brandon-Croft (born November 27, 1958) [1] is an American cartoonist, [2] best known for creating the comic strip Where I'm Coming From, and for being the first nationally syndicated African-American female cartoonist. [3] [4] [5]
Blanche Dumoulin – made comics for Spirou and was the wife of Rob-Vel [239] *Marianne Duvivier [240] Liliane Funcken – made comics for the magazine Tintin with her husband Fred [241] Dominique Gillain [242] Jeanne and Laure Hovine – Nic et Nac, notable for being the first Belgian female comics artists [243] Ilah – Cordelia [244]
The National Cartoon Museum was an American museum dedicated to the collection, preservation and exhibition of cartoons, comic strips and animation. It was the brainchild of Mort Walker, creator of Beetle Bailey. The museum opened in 1974, and went through several name changes, relocations, and temporary closures, before finally closing for ...
This is a list of American comics creators. Although comics have different formats, this list covers creators of comic books , graphic novels and comic strips , along with early innovators. The list presents authors with the United States as their country of origin, although they may have published or now be resident in other countries.
In 2007, King Features Syndicate donated its proof-sheet collection, consisting of over two million strips (a duplicate set was donated to Michigan State University's Comic Art Collection). [ 7 ] In June 2008, the collection of the International Museum of Cartoon Art (more than 200,000 originals with an estimated value of $20 million) was ...
T.H.E. Fox is a furry webcomic by Joe Ekaitis which ran from 1986 [1] [2] to 1998. It is among the earliest online comics, predating Where the Buffalo Roam by over five years. [1] [2] T.H.E. Fox was published on CompuServe, Q-Link and GEnie, [3] and later on the Web as Thaddeus. [4]
Frances Edwina Dumm (1893 – April 28, 1990) was a writer-artist who drew the comic strip Cap Stubbs and Tippie for nearly five decades; she is also notable as America's first full-time female editorial cartoonist. She used her middle name for the signature on her comic strip, signed simply Edwina.