(b. 23/11/1959, Argentina) Eduardo Risso made his professional debut at the publishing house Columba in 1981, publishing his first work in the publisher's journal La Nacion and the magazines Eroticon and Satiricon. In the mid-1980s, he illustrated two comics for Editoriale Eura in Rome, 'Chas' and 'Cain', both with scenarios by Ricardo Barreiro. In 1989, he teamed up with Carlos Trillo to create the fantastic saga 'Fulù', that appeared in Puertitas. With the same scenarist, Risso came up with 'Simon, une Aventure Américaine', 'J.C. Benedict', 'Chicanos' and 'Borderline'. In 1997, he started collaborating with the North-American publisher Dark Horse to illustrate a comic adaptation of the movie 'Alien Resurrection'. This was followed by 'Aliens: Wraith' in 1998 and 'Video Nocturno' in 2001, a comic he had created for the French publisher Albin Michel in 1994.In 1998 he teamed up with Brian Azzarello and illustrated the mini-series 'Jonny Double' for DC Comics. Also with Azzarello he began the award-winning series '100 Bullets' for DC's Vertigo imprint in 1999, as well as the 'Batman' mini-series 'Broken City' in 2003-04. His other DC stints include 'Flinch', 'Heart Throbs', 'Weird Western Tales', 'Batman: Gotham Knights', 'Transmetropolitan' and 'Winter's Edge'.In addition, he has illustrated 'Spider-Man's Tangled Web' and 'Logan' for Marvel, and published stories in Heavy Metal Magazine. Between 2000 and 2002, Risso made several books for Albin Michel in France, such as 'Je Suis un Vampire' (4 books), 'Lectures Macabres' and 'Tabasco Blues'