Dean Ormston

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Dean Ormston
Nationality British
Area(s) Penciler, Inker
Notable works
Harke & Burr
The Girl Who Would Be Death

Dean Ormston is a British born comic book artist. His most notable work has been for the British comic 2000 AD and for DC Comics' Vertigo imprint.

Biography

Ormston was born in Yorkshire, England and earned a degree in art and illustration at Leeds University sometime around the mid-1980s. For the following few years he spent his time between playing the drums in various bands, some of which released singles and compilation album tracks (The Silent Scream, The second Coming, This Colossal Youth) and working part-time in a Sheffield comic-book shop with fellow budding artists Nick Percival, Greg Staples and filmmaker Lee Ford. Sometime in 1990 he moved into working full time as an artist working mainly for Judge Dredd Megazine.

Ormston's dark, thick paints were seen in action on the Judge Dredd strip on numerous occasions, most notably in the Judgement Day and Raptaur storylines. For the Judge Dredd Megazine Ormston also created, with Si Spencer, the comedy strip Harke & Burr, a twist on the notorious grave robbers Burke and Hare. He drew part of "The Kindly Ones" story arc in Neil Gaiman's The Sandman series.[1][2] His work can also be seen in the Predator comics for Dark Horse, Lucifer and Books of Magic for DC Vertigo.

Ormston's prominent American comic credits include The Girl Who Would Be Death,[3] many issues of Lucifer, and primary artist on Books of Magick: Life During Wartime, all published under the Vertigo imprint of DC Comics.

His other works include a brief spell as character designer for Mainframe Animation where he co-created Dot's Bots with writer Steve Seagle, a proposed 13 episode series that so far has only made it to a 30-minute pilot episode. His Reboot Character design of Daemon can be seen in the TV movie Daemon Rising made in 2001.

Bibliography

  • Harke & Burr (with Si Spencer):
    • "Antique and Curious" (in Judge Dredd Megazine #2.27–2.28, 1993)
    • "Hamster Horror" (in Judge Dredd Megazine #2.40–2.42, 1995)
    • "Grief Encounter" (in 'Judge Dredd Megazine #2.47–2.49, 1994)
    • "Satanic Farces" (with co-author Gordon Rennie, in Judge Dredd Megazine #3.04–3.07, 1995)

Notes

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  3. The Girl Who Would Be Death #1
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  5. DC Comics

References