Jon Davis-Hunt: Difference between revisions

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'''Jon Davis-Hunt''' is a British artist. He originally worked on concept art for the lucrative, popular video game industry before migrating to the not-lucrative, struggling comic industry, as opposed to the usual way round. His main non-''Transformers'' work has been various ''2000 AD'' strips and ''The Wild Storm''.
'''Jon Davis-Hunt''' is a British artist. He originally worked on concept art for the lucrative, popular video game industry before migrating to the not-lucrative, struggling comic industry, as opposed to the usual way round. His main non-''Transformers'' work has been various ''2000 AD'' strips and ''The Wild Storm''.


His ''Transformers'' work are mainly issues for [[Transformers (Titan Magazine)|Titan Magazines]], but he's also drawn for the [[IDW Publishing]]'s [[Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen Official Movie Adaptation|''Revenge of the Fallen'' movie adaptation]] (issues [[Revenge of the Fallen issue 1|1]], [[Revenge of the Fallen issue 2|2]], and [[Revenge of the Fallen issue 4|4]]). At Titan, he became the regular artist with Vol.2 of the series (the ''first'' regular artist it ever had!) and, in contrast to IDW, used a toy-based approach for the characters who weren't in the films. His most important deviation from the IDW style was he went old school and gave the robots actual faces rather than the mass-of-moving-parts look of the movie aesthetic.  
His ''Transformers'' work are mainly issues for [[Transformers (Titan Magazine)|Titan Magazines]], but he's also drawn for the [[IDW Publishing]]'s [[Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen Official Movie Adaptation|''Revenge of the Fallen'' movie adaptation]] (issues [[Revenge of the Fallen issue 1|1]], [[Revenge of the Fallen issue 2|2]], and [[Revenge of the Fallen issue 4|4]]). At Titan, he became the regular artist with Vol.2 of the series (the ''first'' regular artist it ever had!) and, in contrast to IDW, used a toy-based approach for the characters who weren't in the films. His most important deviation from the IDW style was he went old school and gave the robots more traditional faces rather than the mass-of-moving-parts look of the movie aesthetic.  


He used to read [[Marvel Comics|the Marvel UK]] title when he was a lad, so he was "in fanboy heaven!" [http://www.jondavishunt.com/articles_62247.html]
He used to read [[Marvel Comics|the Marvel UK]] title when he was a lad, so he was "in fanboy heaven!" [http://www.jondavishunt.com/articles_62247.html]

Revision as of 19:28, 11 May 2025

This article is about . For other uses of "Jon", see Jon (disambiguation)|The name or term "Jon" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, see Jon (disambiguation).}}

Jon Davis-Hunt is a British artist. He originally worked on concept art for the lucrative, popular video game industry before migrating to the not-lucrative, struggling comic industry, as opposed to the usual way round. His main non-Transformers work has been various 2000 AD strips and The Wild Storm.

His Transformers work are mainly issues for Titan Magazines, but he's also drawn for the IDW Publishing's Revenge of the Fallen movie adaptation (issues 1, 2, and 4). At Titan, he became the regular artist with Vol.2 of the series (the first regular artist it ever had!) and, in contrast to IDW, used a toy-based approach for the characters who weren't in the films. His most important deviation from the IDW style was he went old school and gave the robots more traditional faces rather than the mass-of-moving-parts look of the movie aesthetic.

He used to read the Marvel UK title when he was a lad, so he was "in fanboy heaven!" [1]

List of works

IDW Publishing

Titan Magazines

Interviews