Virtual Pin-ups Art Galleryartist Bill Ward/3
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Biography of Bill Ward (1919 - 1998)Bill Ward discovered that drawing might be something more than a hobby at Ocean City, Maryland when he was seventeen. He earned enough painting pictures on other kids' jackets to support himself through the summer. And more than earning money, as Ward says, "what a fantastic way to meet girls." What better motivation could a young man want! Ward enrolled in the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. Right away, Ward started specializing. He drew girls. Ward took little advantage of attending one of the finest commercial art schools in the country. With the certain advent of war and the knowledge that he'd be going into the service when he turned nineteen, he neglected his studies and concentrated on girls and fraternity life. In his own opinion, he wasn't a good artist when he graduated in 1941. Ward's first job after school was with a Manhattan art service, but this proved a major disappointment when he learned his work was to clean up for the illustrators. He soon managed to get himself fired from this job and found himself working for Jack Binder, drawing backgrounds for Fawcett's comic books, including Mr. Scarlet, Bullet Man, Ibis and The Shadow. Ward credits Binder with teaching him the real skills he needed to become one of the best comic book artists of the period.
Ward got his big break when he did an entire Captain Marvel book. He decided to try for a job at Quality, the top comic line at that time. His timing was perfect. Reed Crandall had just been drafted and Quality offered him Blackhawk. Ward was somewhat overwhelmed. He had only hoped to do a secondary story in one of their books. Instead he was replacing who was, in Ward's words, "the greatest comic book artist of them all." According to Ward, his training by Jack Binder had prepared him well for Blackhawk. All of his practice in inking paid off. Quality particularly liked his covers. Ward comments: Ward was at the top of the comic book world, when as had happened to many others before him, he was drafted. After training, Ward was assigned to communications for an anti-aircraft unit at the Quonset Point Naval Air Base, R.I. His duties left him with plenty of spare time so he began laying out stories for Fawcett during his long night tours. A naval officer noticed his work and suggested he do a strip for the base paper. Ward did, and created Ack-Ack Amy. That strip eventually evolved to become the character for which he is best known, Torchy, the blonde bombshell.
Never again was he to create the classic Blackhawks that he did in 1941-42. His bold yet simple inking style was lost as the inkers butchered his pencilling. He and I were destined to go on doing Blackhawk this way for seven years:- Around 1946, Busy Arnold, Quality's publisher, asked Ward if he had any ideas for another story for Modern Comics. Ward suggested Torchy, the strip about the daffy blonde that he had created while he was in the Army. It quickly became a big success and even got its own book. Ward's particular talent for drawing women stood him in good stead in this period when romance comics became very popular. Ward was soon so busy doing the covers and lead stories for Quality's romance comics that he didn't have time for his own creation and Torchy was turned over to another talented artist, Gil Fox. But Ward's career in comics was nearly finished anyway. It was the early fifties, and Dr. Wertham's campaign to paint comics as bad for kids was having effects. Soon the diminished sales caused Quality to go out of business. Ward found other work drawing cartoons for Abe Goodman's Humorama, and in 1954, at Cracked magazine where he continued for many years. IMPORTANT - This biography of Bill Ward was borrowed from the website The Pin-up Files. The bio's author is DLT and the reference was the book "The Man Behind Torchy", by Bill Ward.
Virtual Pin-ups Art Gallery - Some artworks from Bill Ward |