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- Author: Duncan Eagleson
Author Record # 27850
- Birthplace: California, USA
- Language: English
- Webpages: anniesbookstopworcester.blog, artstation.com, corviddesign.com, duncan-eagleson.deviantart.com, eaglesondesign.com, quantummuse.com, Wikipedia-EN
- Used These Alternate Names:
G. Duncan Eagleson
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Note: Duncan Eagleson is born in California, but raised mostly in New England.
He is an American self-trained painter and former graffiti artist. In the 1980s, his tags, "Daemon" and "Prof-23" appeared on walls and subway cars in New York City.
As a painter, sculptor, author, and digital artist, he will be best known to print comics fans for his popular graphic novel adaptation of Anne Rice's "The Witching Hour", as well as work on Neil Gaiman's "Sandman", Peter Milligan's "Shade the Changing Man", and the Paradox Press "Big Books" series.
He co-scripted and illustrated Zen Karmics for the Engaged Zen Foundation's Prison Ministry, and his online graphic novel "ArcMage" was acclaimed as a breakthrough in webcomics, one of the first to put the HTML format to creative use.
He is the writer and illustrator of the online series "Railwalker: Tales of the Urban Shaman".
Eagleson has created book covers for science fiction and horror novels by authors like Fred Saberhagen, Graham Masterton, Les Daniels, and Robert E. Howard, posters for films like "Nightmare on Elm Street" and "Blademaster", and theatrical billboards for the Pittsburgh Public Theatre, Lamb's Theatre, and magician Jeff McBride.
The Who, Phil Collins, Eric Clapton, Def Leppard, and many other rock groups have used his designs on their tour T-Shirts.
He also created sculpted leather masks for Wes Craven's "Cursed", the WWE wrestler Kane, the Smithsonian, the Big Apple Circus, and Jeff McBride, among others. His award winning leather sculpture and masks are known throughout the world, and frequently appear in his collages and digital compositions.
Eagleson is the current Art director for Pink Narcissus Press, Necon Ebooks, and Corvid Design.
[Sources: quantummuse.com, Wikipedia, and corviddesign.com]
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