Steve Ditko, the Marvel Comics artist who gave the world the woven
webs and soaring red-and-blue shape of Spider-Man and the other-worldly
shimmer of Doctor Strange, has died, authorities said Friday. He was 90.
Ditko was found June 29 in his Manhattan apartment and
was pronounced dead at the scene, police Lt. Paul Ng said. No further
details were immediately available.
Ditko, along with writer Stan Lee, introduced the world
to Peter Parker and his alter-ego Spider-Man in 1962 in an issue of
"Amazing Fantasy." A year later, Ditko introduced the world to
surgeon-turned-metaphysical superhero Doctor Strange.
Spider-Man would go on to become arguably the most indispensable and
recognizable character in the Marvel universe, and Doctor Strange a
member of its permanent pantheon. The adventures of both have been
turned into blockbuster films, and both had essential roles in the
recent "Avengers: Infinity War."
"Comics are unimaginable without his influence,"
tweeted Patch Zircher, a comic-book artist who has worked on "Batman"
and "Superman" for DC Comics. "He co-created Spider-man, which will be
remembered as significant as Doyle creating Sherlock Holmes or Fleming
creating James Bond. Spider-man may outlast them both."
While Lee embraced his status as a creative god among comics fans,
appearing at conventions and in constant cameos in Marvel's films, Ditko
was a recluse who won the worship of the most hardcore comic-book
geeks.
They were quick to praise him and the massive influence he had on art, film and culture Friday.
"Thank you Steve Ditko, for making my childhood
weirder," fantasy author and graphic novel author Neil Gaiman said in a
series of tweets to his 2.7 million followers. "He saw things his own
way, and he gave us ways of seeing that were unique. Often copied. Never
equalled. I know I'm a different person because he was in the world."
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