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Artie Maddicks

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Artie Maddicks
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceX-Factor vol. 1 #2 (March 1986)
Created byBob Layton and Jackson Guice
In-story information
Alter egoArthur "Artie" Maddicks
SpeciesHuman Mutant
Team affiliationsFuture Foundation
Generation X
Daydreamers
X-Terminators
X-Factor
X-Mansion
AbilitiesDepowered, formerly:
Ability to telepathically project images

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Arthur "Artie" Maddicks is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He first appeared in X-Factor #2 (March 1986) and was created by Bob Layton and Jackson Guice.[citation needed]

Bryce Hodgson portrayed a cameo as Artie in the film X2.

Publication history[edit]

Created by Bob Layton and Jackson Guice and appearing in X-Factor #2, as the mutant son of Dr Carl Maddicks, Artie's characterization was as a mute mutant whose father was trying to cure him.[1] Upon his father's death, Artie became a ward of X-Factor appearing sporadically in the X-Titles in the mid to late 1980s. These included the first series of X-Factor and the New Mutants and appearing in a supporting role in the limited series, X-Terminators. He also was seen in titles that were affected by the Mutant Massacre such as Thor and Power Pack before his character fell into comic book limbo with his appearances being limited and occasional.

In the mid-1990s, Artie resurfaced, alongside Leech, as a ward of Gene Nation in the pages of Generation X.[2] How he came about being with Gene Nation has yet to be addressed. Later, he and Leech become wards and supporting cast members of Generation X, alongside Franklin Richards, who had become an "orphan" after the "death" of his parents. This led the three boys to star in their own limited comic book series, Daydreamers, alongside Man-Thing and Tana Nile. After the Generation X title ended with issue #75, Artie fell into limbo again with his fate unclear.

Since the end of Generation X, Leech reappeared having been captured by Weapon X and later as part of The 198.[citation needed] Artie was briefly mentioned as being one of the many mutants who was depowered and whose powers were being "used" by the Collective in New Avengers #18, and although the full circumstances about his being powerless and where he has been have yet to be revealed, he (along with Leech) appeared as guests of Franklin's birthday party within Fantastic Four #574.

Artie Maddicks received an entry in the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe Update '89 #4.

Fictional character biography[edit]

Artie's mutation gives him a lumpy pink form with no nose, large round eyes, and renders him mute.[3] As a ward of X-Factor, Artie is a member of the "X-Terminators".[4]

St. Simons[edit]

When X-Factor splits their wards between two boarding schools, Artie attends St. Simons. During the Inferno, Artie is abducted by the demon N'Astirh. Before he is rescued, Artie witnesses at least two murders.[5] After helping to foil a mutant kidnapping plot,[6] Artie gains an unofficial grandmother in Ida Fassbender, a nervous but kindly woman who lives near St. Simons.[7]

Generation X[edit]

Gene Nation disrupts the school with another kidnapping scheme, this time successful. Artie then becomes a ward of the Massachusetts Academy.[8] When Black Tom Cassidy attacks the school, Man-Thing saves Artie and his friends.[9] As a group, they have several adventures.[10]

Future Foundation[edit]

Artie loses his mutant powers after M-Day.[11] Artie moves to the Baxter Building where he gets a special helmet made by Valeria Richards. It allows him to communicate by creating images in the air - he remains mute due to the deformity caused by his mutations. Joining Artie is his long time friend Leech. [12] Later, the original Fantastic Four leave our reality for what they assume to be four minutes. Weeks pass instead. This possibility had been planned for and the Foundation children are watched over by a trusted roster of replacement members. [13] The Future Foundation help re-create the multi-verse after the events of the Secret War. For the Foundation, five years have passed, while a much smaller amount of time has passed at home. Artie has spent all this time with Reed and Sue Richards and the many fellow students of the Foundation. [14]

Powers and abilities[edit]

Artie is a young mutant with bright pink skin and a lumpy, misshapen skull. He possesses the ability to project telepathic holograms

In other media[edit]

  • Artie Maddicks appears in the film, X2: X-Men United, portrayed by Bryce Hodgson as a student at Xavier's school.[citation needed] In the film, Artie was shown at the X-Men's field trip to a museum, where Storm was teaching a class. When Stryker's team attacked the X-Mansion, Artie was shown as one of the students captured, but was eventually rescued by Nightcrawler, Storm, Wolverine and the rest of the X-Men. Unlike the comic version, Artie wasn't bald or had pink skin, but had a forked snake tongue and was mute. It's uncertain if he possesses telepathy similar to his comic counterpart.

References[edit]

  1. X-Factor #2
  2. Generation X #5
  3. X-Factor #2 (March 1986)
  4. X-Terminators #2 (Nov 1988)
  5. X-Terminators #1–4 (October 1998–January 1999)
  6. "X-Force Annual" #1 (1991)
  7. New Mutants Annual #7 (1991)
  8. Generation X #7
  9. Generation X #25
  10. Daydreamers #1-3
  11. New Avengers #18
  12. Fantastic Four #574
  13. FF Vol 2. #1-16 (2013-2014)
  14. '"Fantastic Four #1-3 (2018)

External links[edit]


This article "Artie Maddicks" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Artie Maddicks. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.