Robert Kane, born Robert Kahn on October 24, 1915, in New York, and who died on November 3, 1998, was an American comic book artist, writer, and animator whose most enduring contribution to popular culture was the co-creation of Batman for DC Comics, developed alongside writer Bill Finger. Kane broke into the comics industry in the late 1930s, and Batman's debut would prove transformative for the medium, launching one of the most recognizable characters in fiction.
Over the course of his career, Kane worked across multiple roles — as artist, inker, letterer, and writer — with his output most heavily concentrated in titles such as Detective Comics, Batman, and World's Finest Comics. He also contributed to Batman annuals and various collected editions that have kept the Golden Age material accessible to newer generations of readers.
Beyond Batman himself, Kane was involved in shaping several of the early characters that populated that corner of the DC universe during its formative years. His visual sensibility helped define the dark, atmospheric tone that the character has carried across decades of adaptations.
Kane received significant recognition late in his life, earning induction into the Jack Kirby Hall of Fame in 1993 and the Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame in 1996 — two of the field's most respected honors. His legacy remains inseparable from the superhero genre itself.