Saga of the Swamp Thing, by John Totleben
'Saga Of The Swamp Thing'. 

As artist/inker on the mid-1980's series, 'Saga of the Swamp Thing', John Totleben combined the elegant line of such illustrators as Franklin Booth and Virgil Finlay with his uniquely contoured, painterly sensibility. John graduated in 1976 from Technical Memorial High, a unique vocational school where he received three years of intensive art instruction. In 1977, John entered the Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Arts in New Jersey, established the previous year. After one year at the Kubert School, he began a three-year stint illustrating 'The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam' for Golden Age legend Harry "A" Chesler. Chesler died one year after the project was completed, and the whereabouts of the art remains unknown.

In 1983, Kubert School classmate Stephen R. Bissette paired up with John as penciller/inker team for DC's then-faltering 'Saga of the Swamp Thing'. The addition of writer Alan Moore forged an artistic assault squad in large measure responsible for the rebirth of American comics as an art form. The industry acknowledged the significance of the Moore/Bissette/Totleben 'Swamp Thing' with the Kirby Award for Best Continuing Series for three consecutive years, while in 1985 Bissette & Totleben received the Kirby Award for Best Art Team. The series introduced the character John Constantine ('Hellblazer') and provided an aesthetic template for DC's VERTIGO imprint. In 1985, John co-created the horror anthology 'Taboo' with Stephen Bissette, sharing editorial responsibilities with Bissette on the first two issues.

John left 'Swamp Thing' in 1986, moving on to provide full art for Alan Moore's 'Miracleman: Book III OLYMPUS'. Totleben realized Moore's revisionist superhero saga with some of the most elaborate rendering ever seen in American comics. 'Miracleman' #13 included the startling news that the artist had been diagnosed with Retinitus Pigmentosa, a progressive eye disease characterized by night-blindness and loss of peripheral vision. More recently, the source of the disease has been traced to a genetic condition known as Usher Syndrome. Though his production rate has slowed, Totleben retains full command of his creative powers. A gifted painter, John's dramatic oils and acrylics have appeared on the covers of 'Swamp Thing', 'Hellblazer', 'The Spectre', and 'The Return of Tarzan'. John joined Steve Bissette and Rick Veitch on Alan Moore's surgically precise Silver Age Marvel satire, 1963. More recently, John illustrated DC's 'Vermillion' #8 and #12, 'The Dreaming' #33, and 'Ultimate Marvel Team Up' #10 (2002). In later years, Totleben developed an interest in digital fine art and digital printmaking.

Miracleman, by John Totleben
'Miracleman'. 

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