The recent flood of Skywald horror mag postings has raised questions about the imported artists who worked for these magazines. In this thread I'll offer what I've found about them. I hope others will add their own info.
SOSTRES =
Ferran Sostres. Spain. Born 1936. Prolific artist of comic strips and paintings. Bio pasted from Lambiek: "Catalan artist Ferran Sostres opened his own studio in Barcelona in 1957, after graduating in graphic arts and further training with painter Josep Maria Baixas. Although his comics mainly appeared in foreign markets he published Bible adaptations in the Spanish collection
H?roes B?blicos circa 1960. Ferran Sostres was one of the Spanish agency artists who contributed their work to the British market in the 1960s. His British works were frequently war stories for magazines
Commando and
Combat Picture Library, but he also participated in the detective series "John Steel", which he drew for
Thriller Picture Library, and in the SF series "Zero-X", which he drew for
T.V. 21. In addition he contributed to girl's magazines such as
Diana and
Jackie, drawing series like "Emergency Nurse Gwen." During the first half of the 1970s he contributed several horror stories to the US publisher Skywald. They appeared in
Psycho, Nightmare and
Scream and most of them were written by Al Hewetson. After that Ferran Sostres focused on his painting and illustration works."
Sostres entered advertising in the 1990s, illustrating ads for countless products. In 1991-1992 the Catalan Department of Culture and Sports chose him to illustrate a series of sports-themed paintings that became part of an educational campaign.
His bio on Tebeosfera:
https://www.tebeosfera.com/autores/sostres_ferran.htmlZESAR =
Cesar Alvarez Ca?ete. Spain. Born 1938. From Tebeosfera: "C?sar ?lvarez began drawing comics in the late 1960s for Bruguera, debuting in 1963 in
Sissi and shortly thereafter in
Heidi, but he worked mainly for foreign markets after he joined [Josep Toutain's studio]
Selecciones Ilustradas. He began to provide illustrations and comics for the British market (
Spellbound) and for the United States. For America, as he was an artist in training as late as 1972, his work was destined for the horror magazines of Skywald. He contributed illustrations and comics to these magazines (at times mistakenly credited as his compatriot C?sar L?pez), notably his work for
Scream and his participation in the
Nosferatu series." Later in the 70s Zesar appeared in Warren's
Vampirella. Around 2010 he drew four issues of Bonelli's
Martin Mystere.https://www.lambiek.net/artists/a/alvarez-canete_cesar.htmMAELO CINTRON was not an imported artist at all, but a Bronx native of Puerto Rican descent. I've found precious little about him. In an article for TwoMorrows'
The Tomb Alan Hewetson describes hiring Cintron during his (Hewetson's) early days as Skywald's editor. The article mainly consists of Hewetson patting himself on the back for creating the series "The Human Gargoyles," which Cintron illustrated, and gives little information on Cintron's later career. In the early 1990s Cintron provided nice cover paintings for several Star Trek novels. In 1992 he adapted into comic book form two Robert E Howard "spicy" stories under the title
Songs of Bastards, for Conquest Press. I haven't been able to find anything on him past that date. Does anyone out there know something?
CESAR LOPEZ =
C?sar L?pez Vera. (1933-1989). Spain. As this artist often signed himself "Cesar" while Cesar Alvarez Ca?ete signed himself "Zesar," it's easy to see how their Skywald credits sometimes got mixed up. Born in Madrid in 1933, C?sar L?pez studied art in France. He returned to Madrid and began doing advertising art. In the late 1950s he started drawing comics for Toray (
Jim Hurac?n, Haza?as B?licas, Haza?as del Oeste). He then worked for an agency that shopped artwork for the French imprint Imperia. He illustrated literary adaptations which Toray later translated into Spanish. He also provided art for a Viking adventure series,
?gan, which was a big hit in France. In the early 70s he joined the Selecciones Ilustradas studio. It was here that he drew stories for Skywald. In the 1980s he drew comics for the Spanish market and helped start a cartoonist's professional association, PAHE (
Panorama Actual de la Historieta Espa?ola) which apparently fizzled out. He passed away in 1989 at the age of 56. (Information from Tebeosfera.)
That's all for now...more to come.