Mike Western: A Tribute
For a feature about the life and work of Mike Western, click here
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First Published: 21 May 2008
Special thanks to Rufus Dayglo for his assistance with some of the images on this page. © is as indicated.
NEW BRITISH COMICS COLLECTIONS AVAIALBLE NOW... This is the first Dan Dare collection I've edited for Titan Books, comprising work by Frank Hampson, Frank Bellamy and Don Harley.
Superb World War 1 strip first published in Battle and another collection edited by me for Titan
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Mike Western: A Tribute
For a feature about the life and work of Mike Western, click here
![]() |
Cover for the 1979 Action!
Holiday Special painted by Mike Western. Click the image for larger
size. Action! and Hookjaw © Egmont
UK |
"Although I never met Mike Western, I always thought
I somehow knew him through his work. For me, he was a true master, superb
at drawing figures and great at visual storytelling. He will be missed
greatly by British comics..."
-- Martin Baines, Artist
"I never had the privilege of meeting Mike Western, and only got to know his
work while preparing articles about the history of Battle
Picture Weekly. I
was knocked out by the stunning quality of his art and his storytelling.
"Mike's
contribution to strips like The Sarge and HMS
Nightshade was massive, but
his Battle masterpiece has to be the sublime
Darkie's Mob, co-created with John Wagner. You can feel the sweltering heat
in every panel, see the grim realities of war etched into the faces of Mike's
characters. He was a great comics artist, and it's a regret I never got the
chance to commission work from him."
-- David Bishop, Ex-editor 2000AD.
"My first introduction to Mike Western's work was through the
reprints of Darkie's Mob in the Judge
Dredd Megazine a few years ago. I was
instantly struck by his expressive drawing, masterly use of shadow and spot
black, but most of all, by the sheer effortless density of his storytelling;
this was a man who routinely fit twelve panels onto a page, yet his pages
never looked cluttered or crowded. Irregular and open panels would be arranged
in a kind of tesselation which looked incredibly dynamic, yet the sequence
was always crystal clear, the storytelling foremost.
"I know no-one working
in comics today who could match that combination of density and clarity."
-- Matt Brooker, comics artist, writer, colourist
""An artist who surely stands with the many giants of British comics, his artwork could be cartoony, or realistic, slick, or gritty, but always beautifully rendered and dynamic."
-- Paul Harrison
Davies, artist
![]() |
Mike Western's illustration
of The Sarge which he gave to Rufus. Click the image for larger size.
The Sarge © Egmont
UK |
"Mike Western was one of my earlist Artistic Heroes.
I pored over his work in Battle every week, thrilled at his stark black
and white depictions of The Sarge and Darkie's
Mob.
"I worked with Mike's son Pete Western
at various animation companies, and he kindly put me in touch with this
incredible man.
"Mike sent me a beautiful illustration of The
Sarge, and thanked ME for remembering Him, and his work.
"Thank you Mike, for so much inspiration, generousity,
and happy childhood hours, tracing your sublime drawings."
-- Rufus Dayglo, artist (2000AD, IDW's Tank Girl)
"Mike is one of my all time fav british comic artists. He made
a 10 year old boy cry when Darkie died in the jungle way back in the 1970's
[in Battle]. I loved his style and that he could draw anything from humour
to action to drama. It's very sad news -- but he leaves us all wonderful
memories and his fantastic art ."
-- Jon Haward, artist
"I can't remember ever meeting Mike Western, though I'm sure I spoke to him during the time he was one of the key British creators forming the membership of the Society of Strip Illustration in the late 1970's.
"Garth Ennis gave me a chunk of Mike's HMS Nightshade work as part of the ref material for one of my War
Story issues - Nightingale. It helped only partly, because Nightshade was a different vessel to Nightingale, but it was a real treat to have a doorstep of Mike's fantastic art to look over, the most I'd ever seen of it at any one time. In the Sixties and early Seventies, his style set him apart from most of his British colleagues because it had a quality that was commonly found in American work but seldom in the UK at that time - muscularity. There were no weak lines on any part of it - and it had a vibrancy that was almost three-dimensional. Energy sprang from the panels he drew, and the panels themselves looked like they wanted to jump off the page.
"War stories were Mike Western's forte, but not my preferred entertainment option when I was in my formative years. If they had been, there's no doubting I'd have been as influenced by his work as I know many of my fellow artists were. He was a guiding light to them and a bright light in the overall dullness of the British comics industry."
-- David Lloyd, artist
"Mike Western was always a name with Phil Gascoine or Eric
Bradbury, that
seem to be there to fill any gap in any comic when called upon to do so,
those professionals that could turn there hand to anything. When I first
started in the business as I was struggling to define a believable tree.
"Mike Western would be drawing anything from cute kids to hard ware science
fiction, his versatility was wide and his illustrative understanding was
deep, he was an inspiration from his character depiction to his
professionalism in filling any page with a depth and believability in a
very unforgiving medium, his black line had a gritty reality that I aspired
too, Mike Western a classic artist in the best tradition of British comics
which is the less for his passing."
-- John Higgins, artist
"Mike Western was truly one of the great
British comic artists. I hope one day he gets the recognition and accolades
he deserves and that perhaps he was denied in life. The sketch of Joe Darkie
he did for me is one of my most treasured possesions."
-- Colonel Marbles, Webmaster, Battle fan site:
www.frothersunite.com/files/marbles/fanboy/battle.htm
"For me, it wasn't until i was doing Albion that
i really came to appreciate and see the standout talent [Mike Western] had.
For part of my research i spent zillions of hours reading/re-reading old
English comic and annuals, and was bowled over by the versatility and style
of Mike's art, cus, he could do playful, funny stuff, in a lovely fluid,
exaggerated style, then you'd have the dark and realistic mood and rendering
of his war stories. Whatever he was doing, it was strong and confidant, full
of expression and energy, and I learnt a lot from his art, and it partly
helped convince me that an artist does not have
to put his style in stasis; instead, you just draw to suit the subject."
-- Shane Oakley, artist (Read
his full tribute here)
![]() |
One of Mike's stunning spreads
for The
Sarge, which featured in Battle, Click the image for larger
size.
The Sarge © Egmont UK |
"I was every sad to hear of Mike's passing. He was
a giant comic artist that brought a lot of happiness to this Artist.
"As a young boy Mike Western's Darkie's
Mob brought
so much joy every week as the comic came into the shop. I had
Darkie drawings over my school books as well as a sketch book.
"I came across
it not long ago and there was the sketches still there -- the comics long
gone but the excitement still there.
Even looking at them with my drawing skills today at 43, there is still some
of Mike's influence in them."
Brendan Rowland Artist - Illustrator
"I fear that during his most prolific period, like so many
other UK comics creators, Mike Western's superb draughtsmanship and amazing
output was taken for granted by us all. Sadly, we were overawed by the more
dynamic four-colour fare the US beguiled us with.
"It is only in hindsight that we realise how good such mainstays of the UK
industry truly were.
"British comics would have been much less without Mike, as are we by his passing.
-- Dez Skinn, author, script writer, former editor at
IPC, of Warrior and Comics
International
"I loved the clarity of his artwork and his bright distinctive
style. Those many Valiant covers he did had
excellent composition. A true giant of British comics."
-- Lew
Stringer, writer, artist
"Mike Western was not only one of the great comics artists
of all time,
he was also a Gentleman, with a capital 'G'. When I look back at my
time as an Editor, I can remember with enormous pleasure, the time we
spent working together. No matter what the subject, Mike would always
produce artwork to the very highest standard.
"He's famous for such strips as The Sarge,
but
I can remember how well he took over drawing Roy of
the Rovers for the Daily
Star, following the sudden,
tragic death of Yvonne Hutton. I always looked forward to his Christmas cards
which, until very recently, were hand-drawn and unique examples of his artistic
genius. Mike Western will be missed by all those people who knew him. Mike's
tribute will be the millions of children (and their dads!) who were entertained
by his brilliant artwork."
-- Barrie Tomlinson, editor, writer
"I only met Mike once or twice. I knew him more from his beautiful rendering
of my stories. He was one of a dwindling band of true comic heroes, old school
in the very best sense of the words. The complete professional - gifted,
totally reliable, a terrific artist and a genuinely decent man. He will be
missed."
-- John Wagner, writer, Darkie's Mob
"I was a huge fan of Mike Western's art, so it is with great
regret and sorrow that I hear about his passing. If there was one word I
would use to describe his comic strip art, it would be "intense".
No matter what the genre he worked in, be it comedy, war or adventure, there
was an "intensity" to his work that made him stand out from his
peers. His compositions were dynamic, and his storytelling kinetic.
His illustration style was realistic, but it was realism on the maximum setting.
Inks flew across his pages, giving his characters and settings a startling
vitality. Rendered in broad, confident lines and deep shadows, he really
had the knack of making his characters expressive and life-like.
"I always wanted to see how Mike would have handled modern or mainstream
comic strip stories... it would have been nice to see him draw an episode
of Bad Company or Rogue
Trooper. Imagine him working on Batman or Superman!
Alas, all these un-drawn strips are now dispatched to the "What If" drawers.
But I tell you something, they would have been great. Really, really great!"
-- Chris
Weston, artist