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Tatjana Wood (born March 2, 1926 in Darmstadt, Germany) is an American artist and comic book colorist.

Biography[]

Tatjana's father was Jewish, and her mother was Christian. During World War II, she and her brother, Karl Joachim Weintraub, were sent to an international Quaker boarding school in Holland. Gaining Dutch citizenship was not easy, so after World War II, the Quakers arranged for the two to travel to New York in 1947.[1] Karl went on to the University of Chicago, while Tatjana stayed in New York, attending the Traphagen School of Fashion. In 1949, she met Wally Wood, and they married August 28, 1950.

During the 1950s and 1960s, she sometimes made uncredited contributions to Wood's artwork. One of the stories she worked on was "Carl Akeley" in EC Comics' Two-Fisted Tales #41 (February–March 1955). She did a number of animal drawings for that story.[2] She and Wood divorced in the '60s.

Later, beginning in 1969,[1] she did extensive work for DC Comics as a comic book colorist, including Grant Morrison's Animal Man, Alan Moore's issues of Swamp Thing, and Camelot 3000.[3] She won the Shazam Award for Best Colorist in 1971 and 1974. Tatjana has had no significant credits in the comics industry since 2003.[4]

Tatjana is also a skilled dressmaker and weaver, who has crafted theatrical costumes and pictorial loom tapestries.[1]

Tatjana's brother Karl died March 25, 2004. He was a distinguished scholar at the University of Chicago and the author of two books, Visions of Culture: Voltaire-Guizot-Burckhardt-Lamprecht-Huizinga-Ortega y Gassett (1966) and The Value of the Individual: Self and Circumstance in Autobiography (1978).[5]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Tatjana Wood profile, Who's Who in American Comic Books, 1928–1999.
  2. Stewart, Bhob with Jim Vadeboncouer, Jr. The Wallace Wood Checklist (TwoMorrows Publishing, 2003).
  3. Tatjana Wood/Colorist, DC Comics Database]
  4. Tatjana Wood profile, ComicBookDB.com. Accessed March 10, 2010.
  5. "Karl Joachim Weintraub," The University of Chicago News Office (March 26, 2004).
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