While subjective, agree with most.
Think Deodato Jr's Thunderbolts was the last thing of his I truly enjoyed. Find his pencils/inks to heavy these days.
No to Bagley. On anything. (Doesn't mean I didn't enjoy Ult. Spider-Man).
Will throw in Maleev for DD and Ribic on Thor and maybe Guice on Winter Soldier.
Truth be told looking at the list, seems the writing and general tone also "enhanced" the art.
Steve Ditko on Peter Parker. Everybody since has drawn Pete as Hollywood star, handsome, boring.
And Steve D imagining of Dr Strange’s spirit world, also fantastic.
George Perez on Avengers
John Byrne on X-Men
Jack Kirby on FF
Bob Layton on Iron Man
Jim Starlin on Adam Warlock
Ron Lim on Silver Surfer
Gene Colan on DD
Joe Bennett on Hulk
Oh, and Bill Sienkeweicz on Moon Knight
Marie Severin Sub-Mariner
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Prefer Frank Cho's women, I can agree with Romita Jr on the best choreographed fights, Wolverine: Enemy of the State was glorious, also like his Wolverine Dark Reign fight with Daken vs The Punisher, fucking brutal. McNiven and Lee are hard choices for best Wolverine though, might have to with Lee due to speed.
John Byrnes FF was nothing short of genius
John Buscemas Thor, epic
"Sir, does this mean that Ann Margret's not coming?"
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"One of the maddening but beautiful things about comics is that you have to give characters a sense of change without changing them so much that they violate the essence of who they are." ~ Ann Nocenti, Chris Claremont's X-Men.
"Sir, does this mean that Ann Margret's not coming?"
----------------------
"One of the maddening but beautiful things about comics is that you have to give characters a sense of change without changing them so much that they violate the essence of who they are." ~ Ann Nocenti, Chris Claremont's X-Men.
"Sir, does this mean that Ann Margret's not coming?"
----------------------
"One of the maddening but beautiful things about comics is that you have to give characters a sense of change without changing them so much that they violate the essence of who they are." ~ Ann Nocenti, Chris Claremont's X-Men.
It almost feels to me that there should be divisions based on era or style for this. Kind of feels like comparing apples and oranges to debate between modern artists like Adi Granov, Gabriele Dell'Otto, what have you, versus Silver Age artists.
Then there was Tom Raney's Thor.
Just...wow.
"Sir, does this mean that Ann Margret's not coming?"
----------------------
"One of the maddening but beautiful things about comics is that you have to give characters a sense of change without changing them so much that they violate the essence of who they are." ~ Ann Nocenti, Chris Claremont's X-Men.