Vincent Deporter

Vincent Deporter is an international Belgian artist who works in both comics and animation. Deporter got his start in comics working as an assistant to Jean Graton, before selling his own strips, as Mike Deporter, to Spirou magazine.[1] In 1996, after relocating to New York, he has worked on DC's line of comic books adapted from popular animated cartoons, like Scooby-Doo and Ed, Edd n Eddy,[2][3] and has also inked many of the Batman, and Superman style-guides. He continued to work for Nickelodeon, notably on SpongeBob SquarePants. When Nickelodeon Magazine closed its pages, he then started to write and draw for the "SpongeBob Comics", as a regular contributor.[1] Vincent Deporter also writes and illustrates on more philosophical issues. He has illustrated the book Sacred Cows: a Lighthearted Look at Belief and Tradition around the World, by the host of The Thinking Atheist Seth Andrews. He now lives in Arizona, painting and writing his first non-graphic novels.

Vince Deporter
BornVincent Deporter
(1959-02-13) 13 February 1959
Nivelles, Belgium
NationalityBelgian
Area(s)artist (pencils, inks, color), writer
Pseudonym(s)Deporter, Mike Deporter
Notable works
Crazy Planet
Les Fourmidables
Roméo

Bibliography

Comic work includes:

  • Roméo (with Philippe Rive, Glénat, 1994, ISBN 978-2-7234-1698-6)
  • Mimi Siku (with Hervé Palud, Glénat, 1994, ISBN 978-2-7234-1831-7)
  • The Big Book of (Paradox Press):
    • Weird Wild West: How the West Was Really Won! (1998, ISBN W1563893614)
    • Grimm: Truly Scary Fairy Tales to Frighten the Whole Family (2000, ISBN 1-56389-501-3)
    • Bad: The Best of the Worst of Everything (2001, ISBN 1-56389-359-2)
    • Vice (2001, ISBN 1-56389-454-8)
  • Les Fourmidables (Bamboo)
    • Des fourmis dans les jambes (2003, ISBN 2-912715-63-6)
    • Cirques divers (2004, ISBN 2-915309-05-1)
  • Cartoon Cartoons:
    • Name That Toon! (tpb collecting Dexter's Laboratory #1 & 4, Cartoon Cartoons #1-4 and Cartoon Network Starring #2, 2004, ISBN 1-4012-0181-4)
    • The Gangs All Here (tpb collecting Dexter's Laboratory #5-6, Cartoon Cartoons #5 & 7 and Cartoon Network Starring #7)
  • Scooby-Doo:
    • Vol. 5. Surf's Up (written by Chris Duffy, Joe Edkin and Terrance Griep, DC Comics, 2006, ISBN 1-4012-0936-X)
    • Vol. 6. Space Fright (written by Chris Duffy, Joe Edkin and Terrance Griep, DC Comics, 2006, ISBN 1-4012-0937-8)
  • SpongeBob SquarePants:
    • "Best in Show (Nick Zone) " (written by Tracey West, ISBN 0-439-56278-3)
    • "Beyond Bikini Bottom! " (written by Sonali Fry, ISBN 0-689-87738-2)
    • "Special Delivery!" (written by Steven Banks, ISBN 0-689-85887-6)
    • "Stop the Presses!" (written by Steven Banks, ISBN 0689877269)
    • "The Song That Never Ends" (written by Steven Banks, ISBN 1-59961-446-4)
    • "The Three Little Neighbors" (written by David Lewman, Gene Vosough, ISBN 1-4169-0688-6)
    • "SpongeBob SquarePants Phonics Box" (written by Sonia Sander, ISBN 0-439-77948-0)
    • "Hoedown Showdown" (written by Kelli Chipponeri, also illustrated by Barry Goldberg, ISBN 1-4169-0689-4)
gollark: I wonder if DE counts this as defeating them, such that you can access the chaos crystals.
gollark: Good news: chaos guardians can indeed go in spatial IO.
gollark: Unless it just tries to fly back to where its crystals ought to be! I should check!
gollark: It would *attack* you, which would work.
gollark: I am not sure.

References

  1. "Vincent Deporter". Comiclopedia. Lambiek comic shop. 9 February 2007. Retrieved 14 February 2007.
  2. "SCOOBY-DOO VOL. 6: SPACE FRIGHT". DC Comics. Retrieved 14 February 2007.
  3. "CARTOON CARTOONS VOL. 1: NAME THAT TOON!". DC Comics. Retrieved 14 February 2007.

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