David Lafuente

(Redirected from Lafuente, David)

David Lafuente is a Spanish-born comic book artist known for his work on books such as Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man. He currently resides in London.[1]

David Lafuente
Lafuente in 2019
NationalitySpanish
Area(s)Penciller, inker, cover artist, concept artist
www.lafuente.rip

Career

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Lafuente first penciled such series as Phénix and Kabur (written by Jean-Marc Lofficier) for Hexagon Comics, then was discovered by Marvel Editor C.B. Cebulski at the Dublin City Comic Con during the editor's self-named talent search ChesterQuest", though the artist's official website displays professional work dated much earlier than this. His first work for Marvel was doing the layouts and coloring for Spider-Man Family #2, Published in 2007. His first major work, however, was providing the pencils/inks for Kathryn Immonen's 2008-2009 Hellcat mini-series.[2] After collaborating with writer Brian Michael Bendis on an Ultimate Spider-Man Annual in 2008, he was picked as the regular artist for that series' 2009 relaunch, which debuted in August 2009.[1] He took over New Mutants as the regular artist, starting on issue 29, which was a tie-in to the 2011 "Fear Itself" storyline.

On April 9, 2011 Lafuente was one of 62 comics creators who appeared at the IGN stage at the Kapow! convention in London to set two Guinness World Records, the Fastest Production of a Comic Book, and Most Contributors to a Comic Book. With Guinness officials on hand to monitor their progress, writer Mark Millar began work at 9am scripting a 20-page black and white Superior comic book, with Lafuente and the other artists appearing on stage throughout the day to work on the pencils, inks, and lettering, including Dave Gibbons, Frank Quitely, John Romita Jr., Jock,[3] Doug Braithwaite, Ian Churchill, Olivier Coipel, Duncan Fegredo, Simon Furman, John McCrea, Sean Phillips and Liam Sharp,[4] who all drew a panel each, with regular Superior artist Leinil Yu creating the book's front cover. The book was completed in 11 hours, 19 minutes, and 38 seconds, and was published through Icon on November 23, 2011, with all royalties being donated to Yorkhill Children's Foundation.[3]

In January 2015 it was announced that Kieron Gillen, Jim Rossignol and David Lafuente were working on a creator-owned series for Image Comics titled "The Ludocrats."[5] Due to schedule issues, the art ended up being done by Jeff Stokely.[6]

David Lafuente was exclusive to Valiant Comics in 2015 and 2016 [7] and was the regular artist on A&A: The Adventures Of Archer & Armstrong. In 2019 drew the Amazing Spider-Man Annual starring Spider-Ham, written by Jason Latour, later moved to DC Comics to work on Superman with frequent collaborator Brian Michael Bendis.[8]

As of 2022, Lafuente works as video-game concept artist for Atmos.

YouTube

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David Lafuente has an active YouTube presence in his own channel and in the Streaming de Dibujantes channel with David Lopez (artist).

Bibliography

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Interior comic work includes:

Covers only

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b NYCC '09 - David Lafuente on Ultimate Spider-Man, Newsarama, February 12, 2009
  2. ^ Raising Hell(cat): Lafuente Draws "Patsy Walker", Comic Book Resources, June 11, 2008
  3. ^ a b "Kapow! '11: Comic History Rewritten On The IGN Stage". IGN. April 14, 2011
  4. ^ "Guinness World Records at Kapow! Comic Con" Archived April 15, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Guinness World Records. April 9, 2011
  5. ^ Kamen, Matt (8 January 2015). "Exclusive: Image Comics attacks normalcy with 'The Ludocrats'". Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2017-08-26.
  6. ^ Horne, Karama (2020-05-29). "Indie Comics Spotlight: Why the insanity of Ludocrats is exactly what we need right now". SYFY WIRE. Retrieved 2020-10-19.
  7. ^ "C2E2 EXCLUSIVE: Valiant Announces 15 Artists Under Exclusive Deals". 17 March 2016.
  8. ^ "Ultimate Spider-Man, Volume 11 by Brian Michael Bendis, David Lafuente, Stuart Immonen". app.thestorygraph.com. Retrieved 3 February 2022.

References

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Preceded by Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man artist
2009– 2011
Succeeded by