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Dillon Naylor (born 1968) is an Australian cartoonist, illustrator and toy designer. He is the creator of the comic strip ''Batrisha the Vampire Girl'', which appeared for six years in the children's magazine ''K-Zone'' and was the basis for two children's books. Other comic strips include ''Rock 'n' Roll Fairies'' which appeared in the children's magazine ''Total Girl'',〔() Supanova Pop Culture Expo - guest biography〕 and ''Camilla and Mike'' which appears in the educational magazine (''Challenge'' ).〔() Pulp Faction, The Australian On-line Comics Community〕 Naylor's comic series published through his own publishing imprint Cowtown Comics have included ''Da 'n' Dill'' (a long-running showbag insert, and a newspaper strip in the Sydney Sun-Herald〔 from 2001 to 2008), ''Pop Culture & Two Minute Noodles'' and the official ''Martin & Molloy'' comic. Naylor's extensive work in designing and illustrating music posters includes work for the Beastie Boys and the Fireballs. Naylor has released a graphic novel collection of his early horror and rock 'n' roll art, ''A Brush With Darkness'', and a collection of his ''Da 'n' Dill'' showbag comics, both through Australian publisher, Milk Shadow Books. Naylor's artistic influences include the work of Carl Barks (creator of ''Scrooge McDuck'') and Hergé (creator of ''The Adventures of Tintin''), and the classic horror comic anthologies published by EC Comics. Naylor lives in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. He is married and has two children. ==References== * ''Bonzer: Australian comics 1900-1990s'' edited by Annette Shiell; checklist compiled by Mick Stone. Redhill South, Vic.: Elgua Media, 1998. ISBN 1-876677-00-7 / 1876677066 * Grushkin, Paul & King, Dennis - ''Art of modern rock: The poster explosion''. San Francisco, Calif.: Chronicle Books, 2004. ISBN 0-8118-4529-X * Juddery, Mark - ''Outside the Squares'' - The Bulletin (Australian edition), Vol. 123 Issue 6500 (13 Dec. 2005), p. 64-65 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Dillon Naylor」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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