Spanish comics
Comics originating in Spain / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Spanish comics are the comics of Spain. Comics in Spain are usually called historietas or cómics, with tebeos primarily denoting the magazines containing the medium. Tebeo is a phonetic adaptation of TBO, a long-running (1917–1983) Spanish comic magazine, and sounds like "te veo" ("I see you").
Spanish comics | |
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Earliest publications | 1917 |
Publishers | Editorial Bruguera Editorial Valenciana Ediciones Metropol Norma Editorial Robot Comics |
Publications | TBO Pulgarcito Mort & Phil El Víbora Carpanta |
Creators | Ibañez Escobar Vázquez Jan Max |
Series | "Capitán Trueno" "Superlópez" "Zipi y Zape" "Anacleto, agente secreto" "Las hermanas Gilda" |
Languages | Spanish Catalan |
Related articles | |
Argentine comics Mexican comics Franco-Belgian comics |
Two publishing houses — Editorial Bruguera and Editorial Valenciana — dominated the Spanish comics market for most of its history.
Spanish artists have traditionally worked in other markets reaching great success, either in the American (e.g., Eisner Award winners Sergio Aragonés, Salvador Larroca, Gabriel Hernández Walta, Marcos Martín or David Aja), the British (e.g., Carlos Ezquerra, co-creator of Judge Dredd) or the Franco-Belgian one (e.g., first Fauve d'Or winner Julio Ribera or Blacksad authors Juan Díaz Canales and Juanjo Guarnido).
The Spanish market is also known for its many studios, which for a long time have had material produced mainly for other European countries.