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Alex Maleev

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Alex Maleev
Алекс Малеев
BornAlexander Maleev
Bulgaria
NationalityBulgarian
Area(s)Illustrator, Painter
Notable works
Daredevil (vol. 2)
Spider-Woman
Awards1996 Russ Manning Most Promising Newcomer Award
2003 Eisner Award for Best Serialized Story
http://www.maleev.com

Alex Maleev (Bulgarian: Алекс Малеев) is a Bulgarian comic book illustrator, best known for the Marvel Comics' series Daredevil (vol. 2) with frequent collaborator Brian Michael Bendis.[1] Steven S. DeKnight has said that Maleev's art was a template for the Daredevil television series.[2]

Career

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Coming from a fine arts background, Maleev made his first foray into comics in Bulgaria for Godan (Годън in Bulgarian) and Carthel of Dead published in Riko magazine since 1991 and 1992, respectively. Upon arriving in the United States in 1995, he enrolled at The Kubert School where, within a month, he was promoted from first to second year status at the suggestion of instructor Alec Stevens. Maleev left the school in early 1996, already securing professional comics work on James O'Barr's The Crow (Dead Time and Flesh and Blood) and subsequently storyboarding the "Lost in Space" film at Continuity Associates before entering a successful run at DC Comics on Batman: No Man's Land. In his comics, he sometimes references his Bulgarian origins. For example in Aliens vs. Predator alien eggs are stored in the cellar of a typical Bulgarian church.

He first teamed with Bendis on Todd McFarlane's Sam and Twitch series in 2000-2001 before they were recruited for Daredevil. In 2006, Maleev finished his run with Bendis in Daredevil and planned a collaboration with the writer on a new ongoing Spider-Woman series. Bendis and Maleev collaborated once again on the much delayed four part Halo: Uprising miniseries from Marvel Comics. Bendis and Maleev relaunched Moon Knight in 2011 with volume 4,[3] and are currently working on the creator owned comic Scarlet, under the Marvel imprint Icon Comics.

Maleev also did art for the "New Avengers: Illuminati" special, the January 2007 issue of the New Avengers, issue #26 and the one-shots, Civil War: The Confession and Secret Invasion: Dark Reign. He also did the artwork for the character Sylar on the TV show Heroes. Often blending photographic and digital effects with drawing in his comics art, as with his work on Daredevil,[citation needed] as well as watercolors and gouache, as on Spider-Woman.[citation needed]

Works

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Dark Horse Comics

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  • Hellboy: Weird Tales #3 ("Still Born", script and art, with co-author Matt Hollingsworth, 2003, collected in Volume 1, 2003, ISBN 978-1-56971-622-9)
  • Hellboy & the B.P.R.D. #1-#5 (limited series) (with Mike Mignola and John Arcudi, 2014—2015)

Image Comics

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Marvel Comics

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DC Comics

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Icon (Marvel Imprint), later Jinxworld (DC Imprint)

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  • Scarlet #1-ongoing (with Brian Michael Bendis, 2010–present)

Other editors

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Video games

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Alex Maleev".
  2. ^ "Interview with Marvel's Daredevil Executive Producer Steven S. DeKnight: Running the Show in Hell's Kitchen," Daredevil and Psychology, Sterling, 2018, p. 46.
  3. ^ "Preview: Moon Knight #1". 29 April 2011. Retrieved 2 June 2011.

References

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