Carmine Di Giandomenico
b. 1973
Carmine Di Giandomenico was born in 1973 in Teramo, Italy, and has built a career spanning both European and American comics, working across publishers on both sides of the Atlantic over nearly three decades.
He began in the mid-1990s with the limited series Examen for Phoenix, then contributed to Marvel Italia's Conan the Barbarian in 1997 on scripts by Chuck Dixon. A significant creative turn came in 1999 when he partnered with writer Alessandro Bilotta on Le strabilianti vicende di Giulio Maraviglia-inventore, a limited series that earned the Fumo di China prize. The collaboration continued into experimental territory with La Dottrina in 2002, and Di Giandomenico then stepped forward as sole author with Oudeis in 2004.
His American mainstream work deepened in 2005 when Marvel published his limited series Vegas alongside a Captain America What If... story. He co-wrote and drew Daredevil: Battlin' Jack Murdock with Zeb Wells, and later illustrated Spider-Man: Noir alongside writer David Hine. He served as the principal artist on Punisher: War Zone in 2012. His longest and most prominent American assignment has been The Flash for DC Comics, a title central to his catalog of nearly 200 credited issues running through 2026. He has also contributed storyboard work to films directed by Martin Scorsese and Tsui Hark, reflecting a versatility that extends well beyond the comics page.
Known for
Full bibliography · 64 series
Original biography and editorial content © comicbooks.com™. Information drawn in part from Wikipedia and the Grand Comics Database. Portrait by Hiron1986 / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0). Cover thumbnails shown under fair use, each linking to its issue.

