Frank Cho | |
---|---|
Frank Cho at the 2010 WonderCon.
|
|
Born | Duk Hyun Cho December 2, 1971 (age 44) Seoul, South Korea |
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Cartoonist, Writer, Penciller, Inker |
Notable works
|
Liberty Meadows |
Awards | 2006 Haxtur Award for Best Artist 2006 Haxtur Award for Best In Show 2001 National Cartoonists Society's Award for Best Comic Book 2001 National Cartoonists Society's Award for Best Book Illustration Charles M. Schulz Award for Excellence in Cartooning Max & Moritz Medal for Best International Comic Strip |
Official website |
Frank Cho, born Duk Hyun Cho, is a Korean-American comic strip and comic book writer and illustrator, known for his series Liberty Meadows, as well as for books such as Shanna the She-Devil, Mighty Avengers and Hulk for Marvel Comics, and Jungle Girl for Dynamite Entertainment. The artist is noted for his figure drawing, precise lines, and depiction of well-endowed women.
The second of three children, Cho was born near Seoul, Korea in 1971, but moved to the United States at the age of six, along with his brothers, Rino and Austin, and their parents, Kyu Hyuk Cho and Bok Hee Cho, who were in search of better economic opportunities. Cho was raised in Beltsville, Maryland.
His parents had college degrees, but because they did not speak English well, they took whatever jobs they could to support the family, with his mother working in a shoe factory, and his father as a carpenter during the day and a janitor at a Greyhound Bus station at night. Because money was scarce, Cho, who describes his latchkey childhood as "rough", was relegated to finding his own extracurricular entertainment. When Cho was ten, his older brother, Rino, brought some comic books home, and Cho started copying the art. When a friend saw that Cho was able to reproduce the artwork without tracing them, he urged Cho to illustrate comics for a living. From that point on, with the exception of some basic art classes, Cho refined his abilities by himself without any formal training, finding influence in Depression-era comics as Prince Valiant and Li'l Abner, and in the work of artists such as Norman Rockwell, N.C. Wyeth, Andrew Loomis, Al Williamson and Frank Frazetta.