Guido Crepas (1933-07-15)15 July 1933 Milan, Italy
Died
31 July 2003(2003-07-31) (aged 70) Milan, Italy
Nationality
Italian
Area(s)
Artist, writer
Notable works
Valentina Anita Histoire d'O Belinda Bianca
Guido Crepas (15 July 1933 – 31 July 2003),[1] better known by his pen name Guido Crepax, was an Italian comics artist. He is most famous for his character Valentina, created in 1965 and very representative of the spirit of the 1960s. The Valentina series of books and strips became noted for Crepax's sophisticated drawing, and for the psychedelic, dreamlike storylines, generally involving a strong dose of erotism. His work was often politically motivated too, inspired by his Communist convictions.[2] A film based on his work called Baba Yaga, featuring the character Valentina, was made in 1973.[3]
Disegno per copertina di libretto, drawing for Count Down. Archivio Storico RicordiThe Lesmo Curve (1965)
The Subterraneans (1965)
The Descent (1966)
Un Poco Loco (1966)
Ciao, Valentina (1966)
The Force of Gravity (1967)
Funny Valentine (1967)
Valentina in Sovietland (1968)
Valentina in Boots (1968)
Marianna in the Country (1968)
Fearless Paper Doll Valentina (1968)
Filippo and Valentina (1969)
Valentina's Baby (1969)
The Manuscript Found in a Stroller (1970)
Baba Yaga (1971)
Bluebeard (1971)
Who's Afraid of Baba Yaga? (1971)
Valentina the Fearless (1971)
Annette (1972)
The Little King (1972)
Pietro Giacomo Rogeri (1972)
The Time Eater (1973)
Fallen Angels (1973)
The Empress's New Clothes (1973)
Reflection (1974)
Private Life (1975)
Subconscious Valentina (1976)
Valentina the Pirate (1976)
Rembrandt and the Witches (1977)
Anthropology (1977)
Le Zattere, Venice (1980)
Other heroines
La casa matta (feat. Bianca, 1969), Edip
Anita, una storia possibile (1972), Persona/Ennio Ciscato Editore
Histoire d'O (1975), Franco Maria Ricci Editore, from the novel by Pauline Réage
Emmanuelle (1978), Olympia Press, from the novel by Emmanuelle Arsan
Justine (1979), Olympia Press, from the novel La nouvelle Justine by de Sade
Hello, Anita! (1980), L'isola trovata, in colour
Belinda 1 & 2 (1983), Editori del Grifo
I viaggi di Bianca (1984), Milano Libri, inspired by Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels
Venere in pelliccia (1984), Olympia Press, inspired to a tale by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch.
Bianca 2. Odesseda (1987), Editori del Grifo
Emmanuelle l'antivergine (1990), Rizzoli
Eroine alla fine: Salomé (2000), Lizard Edizioni
Crepax 60|70 (feat. Belinda, and Valentina 2003), Fiction inc. Tokyo
Other works
L'astronave pirata (1968), Rizzoli
Il dottor Jekill (1972), Persona/Ennio Ciscato Editore
Circuito interno (1977), Edizioni Tempo Medico
Casanova (1977), Franco Maria Ricci Editore
L'uomo di Pskov (1977), CEPIM (Sergio Bonelli Editore), in colour
L'uomo di Harlem (1979), CEPIM (Sergio Bonelli Editore)
La calata di Macsimiliano XXXVI (1984), Editori del Grifo
Conte Dracula (1987), Rizzoli-Milano Libri, from the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker
Dr.Jekyll e Mr.Hide (1987), Rizzoli-Milano Libri, from the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson
Giro di vite (1989), Olympia Press, from the novel The Turn of the Screw by Henry James
Nessuno (1990), Milano Libri
Le clinicommedie (1990), Editiemme
Il processo di Franz Kafka (1999), Piemme, from the novel The Trial by Franz Kafka
Justine and The Story of O (2000), graphic novel of the works by Marquis de Sade and Anne Desclos respectively
Frankenstein (2002), Grifo Edizioni, from the novel by Mary Shelley
Wargames
Besides his much better known activity as a graphic artist, Crepax was a keen wargamer and wargame designer[4] and collector of paper soldiers, drawn by himself.[5] He was the author of some of the first wargames published in Italy to be widely circulated:
La Battaglia di Trafalgar (Corriere dei Piccoli, 1964)
La Battaglia di Waterloo (Linus, 1965)
La Battaglia di Pavia (Linus, 1967)
La Battaglia del Lago Ghiacciato - Alexandr Nevsky (Linus 1972, poi ristampato da Milano Libri)
Other activities
He was also active as an animator and as an album cover designer. [6]