Cover by Carmine Infantino and Joe Giella
Big Town #1 (DC, 1951) Based on the CBS radio and television drama. Carmine Infantino cover. Dan Barry, Sy Barry, and Ruben Moreira art.
The Flash #105 (DC, 1959) The Silver Age Flash gets his own title, with numbering continued from Flash Comics. Origin and first appearance of the Mirror Master. Carmine Infantino cover and art...
Sensation Comics #109 (DC, 1952) Last issue of the title (becomes Sensation Mystery). Carmine Infantino horror cover.
fuckin hand...
(via Batman #181 (DC, 1966) CGC VF/NM 9.0 Off-white to white pages.... | Lot #10064 | Heritage Auctions)
Batman #181 (DC, 1966) CGC VF/NM 9.0 Off-white to white pages. First appearance of Poison Ivy. Cover and centerfold pin-up by Carmine Infantino and Murphy Anderson. Sheldon Moldoff art.
Carmine Infantino — the man who SAVED BATMAN! — died on Thursday at his home in Manhattan. Mr. Infantino, a celebrated comic-book artist who also drew the Flash, was 87.
His agent, J. David Spurlock, confirmed the death.
Mr. Infantino’s dynamic, avant-garde aesthetic helped usher in the “silver age” of comic books, which held sway from the mid-1950s to about 1970. He was known in particular for his long association with DC Comics, where he began as an artist, became an editor and was later the publisher.
Sleek and streamlined, Mr. Infantino’s work married comic-book art — formerly busier and baggier — to midcentury modernism. He was considered one of the industry’s finest pencilers, as the artist who first gives a story visual form is known. (An inker follows behind, filling in the penciler’s lines.)
As a cover artist Mr. Infantino was a master of motion, and on each of the blizzard of covers he drew for DC, the title character seems to spring from the page, straight toward the viewer.
He was also famed for his death-defying resuscitation of two of DC’s most terminal cases: the Flash, selling poorly at midcentury and threatened with cancellation, and Batman, similarly consigned...
(via Fantasy Ink: Batman!)
Batman #195, September 1967. Cover by Murphy Anderson & Carmine Infantino.
Strange Adventures #31, DC Comics, April, 1953 Script: John Broome; Pencils: Carmine Infantino; Inks: Sy Barry
Panel from The Brave and the Bold v.1 #190 (September 1982), script by Mike W. Barr, pencils by Carmine Infantino, inks by Sal Trapani, colors by Gene D'Angelo, letters by Milt Snapinn
[fucking Earth lawyers...]
Original cover by Carmine Infantino and Joe Giella; DC 1960.
CM_Sea_Devils_35 (by PopKulture)
Sea Devils - Issue No. 35, June 1967.
Cover art by Howard Purcell and Carmine Infantino.