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・ Carl Eduard Cramer
・ Carl Eduard Hammerschmidt
・ Carl Eduard Hellmayr
・ Carl Eduard War Cross
・ Carl Edvard Johan Dahl
・ Carl Edvard Johansson
・ Carl Edvard Marius Levy
・ Carl Edvard Rotwitt
・ Carl Edward Bailey
・ Carl Edward Vilhelm Piper
・ Carl Edwards
・ Carl Crawford
・ Carl Crennel
・ Carl Crew
・ Carl Crim
Carl Critchlow
・ Carl Cronin
・ Carl Crook
・ Carl Crossin
・ Carl Crow
・ Carl Crowe
・ Carl Culmann
・ Carl Cunningham
・ Carl Cunningham-Cole
・ Carl Curman
・ Carl Curt Hosseus
・ Carl Curtis
・ Carl Cushnie
・ Carl Czerny
・ Carl d'Silva


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Carl Critchlow : ウィキペディア英語版
Carl Critchlow

Carl Critchlow (born 1963) is a British fantasy and science fiction comic illustrator. He is best known for his character Thrud the Barbarian, which originally appeared in ''White Dwarf'' magazine, and for his work for the ''Lobster Random'' comics.
==Career==
Critchlow's comic book career began in the early 1980s, when he contributed to fanzines and informal publications. His professional career began in 1983 when his work was published in Issue 45 of Games Workshop's ''White Dwarf'' magazine, where Critchlow first portrayed his fantasy barbarian character, ''Thrud the Barbarian'', in a regular, page-long, black and white, ink-drawn strip of the same name. Thrud was published for over fours years until issue 106; the strip was voted 'most popular feature' for three years running in readers' polls.〔 ''Thrud the Barbarian'' often reflected current Games Workshop product lines and borrowed themes from games like Judge Dredd, Blood Bowl and Warhammer 40,000 and Thrud's native fantasy theme. To celebrate the character's status as a popular feature of the publication, Citadel produced a number of metal miniatures of Thrud. Shannon Appelcline referred to Bil's "Gobbledigook" and "Thrud the Barbarian" as the two comics "for which ''White Dwarf'' is probably best known". Critchlow also provided numerous black and white interior illustrations for Games Workshop's Dark Future game, and was featured in an ''Illuminations'' exposè in White Dwarf issue 103.
In 1984, Critchlow had his debut in mainstream comic books when he contributed ''The Black Currant'' strip for ''Warrior'' issue 26. In the 1990s, after the Thrud strip had concluded in White Dwarf, Critchlow began working with 2000AD, and he contributed artwork for Pat Mills' ''Nemesis & Deadlock'' strip. Critchlow contributed art for numerous strips in 2000AD, including ''Tharg's Future Shocks'', ''Judge Dredd'', ''Mean Machine: Son of Mean Machine'', ''Tales of Telguuth'', ''Flesh'', and full colour work for the 1995 crossover ''Judge Dredd/Batman:The Ultimate Riddle''.〔Szadkowski, Joseph (30 October 2004). "Dreaded Judge, Batman confront maniacal evil", ''The Washington Times'', p. C12.〕
Critchlow further contributed to the gaming world in 2000, and his work appeared in ''Dungeons & Dragons'' third edition books ''Monster Manual'', ''Monsters of Faerûn'', ''Magic of Faerûn'', ''Lords of Darkness'', ''Tome of Magic'' and ''Fiendish Codex I: Hordes of the Abyss''. He has also provided illustrations for the ''Wheel of Time Roleplaying Game'' and the ''Star Wars'' supplements ''Secrets of Tatooine'', ''Ultimate Alien Anthology'' and ''Star Wars Hero's Guide'' and almost two hundred illustrations for the Magic: The Gathering card game. He also contributed to ''JLA: Riddle of the Beast'', a DC Comics graphic novel by Alan Grant.〔Solomon, Rizal (26 February 2003). "Parallel lives", ''The Malay Mail'', p. 30.〕
In 2000, Critchlow withdrew from mainstream comics; he wrote and drew the ''Thrud the Barbarian'' strip for its own comic. The series proved popular with the comic reading public and won the Diamond 2004 Award for Best Small Press title. During this time he also worked as a lecturer and numerous new comics artists, such as Barry Renshaw, credited him for helping and inspiring them. In October 2002, four months after the first issue of ''Thrud'' was published, Critchlow started drawing for 2000AD again. His first work was the Judge Dredd story ''Out of the Undercity'' written by John Wagner, followed by the introduction of new comic ''Lobster Random'' in 2003 with ''No Gain, No Pain'', written by Simon Spurrier. This was followed by ''Tooth & Claw'' in 2004 and ''The Agony & the Ecstasy'' in 2006. His current work includes ongoing artwork for Lobster Random and artwork for Judge Dredd scripts by Gordon Rennie.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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