Paolo Piffarerio

Paolo Piffarerio (August 27, 1924 – June 30, 2015) was an Italian comics artist and animator.

Paolo Piffarerio
Born(1924-08-27)27 August 1924
Recanati, Italy
Died30 June 2015(2015-06-30) (aged 90)
OccupationComics artist

Biography

Born in Recanati, the son of a silversmith and a seamstress,[1] Piffarerio studied at the Brera Academy, where he knew Gino Gavioli, with whom he founded "Gamma Film", a company considered a pioneer in the field of Italian animation.[1][2] With Gavioli and Gamma Film Piffarerio realized several animation shorts for Carosello, as well as The Long Green Sock (Italian: La lunga calza verde), a 1961 medium length film about the history of Italy written by Cesare Zavattini.[3]

Piffarerio started his activity as a comics artist while studying at the Brera Academy, where he created the comic character, Capitan Falco, in 1943.[1][4] He collaborated with Max Bunker to a number of comics series, such as Viva l'Italia (1961), Maschera Nera (1963), El Gringo (1965) and Alan Ford, he illustrated for about one hundred issues between 1975 and 1984.[4][5] Piffarerio also collaborated with Enzo Biagi for his La storia d'Italia a fumetti, and was author of a number of comics adaptations of novels and historical biographies for Il Giornalino.[4][5]

gollark: I wouldn't, they don't have to be vast behemoths requiring fancy GPUs.
gollark: I bet you could run very small neural networks of some sort.
gollark: I have immensely janky but functional OCR too, so I could use that for search.
gollark: No, it's too big.
gollark: I haven't CLIPized meme search yet. This was a manual lookup since I knew the filename.

References

  1. Stefano Lorenzetto (14 December 2014). "È stato il papà di «Carosello» Oggi non compra più nulla". Il Giornale. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  2. "Addio a Paolo Piffarerio, disegnatore di Alan Ford e animatore di Carosello". La Repubblica. 1 July 2015. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  3. Gian Piero Brunetta. Storia del cinema mondiale, Volume 1. Einaudi, 1999. ISBN 9788806143466.
  4. "Paolo Piffarerio". Lambiek. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  5. Francesco Borgoglio (30 June 2015). "Ci ha lasciato Paolo Piffarerio, storica matita di Alan Ford". BadComics. Retrieved 1 July 2015.


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