Born in Boston in 1917, Frank Robbins was a child prodigy who won an art scholarship at the age of nine. Having to forgo college due to the Great Depression, Frank drew for an
advertisement firm handling illustrations for RKO Pictures. The artist also
worked for Franklin Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration creating
beautiful murals in the NBC building. Taking over the strip
Scorch Smith from
Noel Sickles in 1939, he found much success in the newspaper syndicate market.
Asked to create his own aviation strip by King Features, Robbins created
Johnny
Hazard which debuted in 1944, heavily influenced by his main inspiration, Milton
Caniff, which the creator wrote and drew until its cancellation in 1977. In the
late 1960s when Robbin's income was shrinking due to his strips dwindling
circulation, the artist worked a deal with Julie Schwartz at National Comics to
write
The Flash, Detective Comics, and
Batman with his first story published in
1968. Having written for DC for four years, Robbins finally got the chance to showcase his
unique art style in
Detective Comics #416 in 1971 with the Caped Crusader
taking on the dreaded Man-Bat. With most of DC's young fans being used to the realistic artwork of Irv
Novick, Neal Adams, and Jim Aparo on the character, they had a hard time with Frank's
loose line and exaggerated brushwork on
Batman.
Even the president of National Comics, Carmine Infantino, did not
care for his Batman drawings, but enjoyed the imaginative story lines the artist wrote, only editor Julie
Schwartz backed and loved his moody dark style. Robbins drew various stories for Plop, Weird War Tales, The Shadow, House of Secrets, House of Mystery, and other titles before leaving DC for more appreciation at Marvel Comics. Asked to join the "House of Ideas" not for his excellent writing ability, but to illustrate a number of
their titles, Frank penciled, The Invaders, Captain America, Daredevil, The Man from Atlantis, What If?,
Ghost Rider, Adventures Into Fear, Powerman, and The Human Fly, just to name a few. Retiring from comics in
1979, Frank Robbins now concentrated on his fine art career being exhibited in
various museums and galleries across the country before his passing in 1994 at the age of 77.
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