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Alex Schomburg

Alex Schomburg
Alex Schomburg.jpg
Alex Schomburg, circa 1940s
Born Alejandro Schomburg y Rosa
(1905-05-10)May 10, 1905
Aguadilla, Puerto Rico
Died April 7, 1998(1998-04-07) (aged 92)
Beaverton, Oregon, United States
Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller, Inker
Pseudonym(s) Xela

Alex A. Schomburg, born Alejandro Schomburg y Rosa (May 10, 1905 – April 7, 1998), was an American commercial artist and comic-book artist and painter whose career lasted over 70 years.

Alex Schomburg was born on May 10, 1905 in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico, and moved to New York City in the early 1920s, where he began work as a commercial artist with three of his brothers. In 1928, the brothers' partnership ended and Schomburg found work with the National Screen Service, creating lantern slides and working on movie trailers there through 1944.

During the 1930s, in addition to working for the NSS, Schomburg freelanced Better Publications, producing interior line art for Thrilling Wonder Stories and others of the company's pulp magazines. His skill at drawing anything mechanical soon had him illustrating aviation covers for Flying Aces and electronic equipment for the Hugo Gernsback pulp Radio Craft. Schomburg's first science fiction-themed cover was for the September 1939 issue of Startling Stories.

The following decade, Schomburg freelanced primarily for Timely Comics, the 1940s forerunner of Marvel, displaying his talent for slam-bang action tableau. In dynamic covers featuring Captain America, the Sub-Mariner, the Human Torch, other Timely superheroes or any combination thereof, Schomburg filled every square inch with flamboyant characters, flames, knives, guns, explosions, Nazis, Japanese, and pretty girls in need of rescue. He mastered the use of the airbrush, signing many of his airbrushed covers "Xela". Schomburg drew between five and six hundred covers during this Golden Age of Comic Books.


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