Have you read a beautifully illustrated comic towed down by poor writing? Or perhaps have you read a well written comic plagued by lackluster art? Some of the most interesting comics stem from disparity in quality between the art and the writing.
I've experienced both ends of the coin yesterday after reading two comics that suffered from this dilemma.
Tradd Moore is for my money the best artist working in comics today. His style is a seamless blend of manga, Euro comics, and 90s Image, but nevertheless feels completely unique. For the art alone, The New World might be one of my favorite comics of all time, but the experience is lessened by the verbose dialogue by Ales Kot which reads a combination of the worst aspects of Warren Ellis and Brian Michael Bendis' writing. This is the only work I've read of Kot's, and I hope that his style of writing grows on me.
Dan Abnett's penmanship in The New Deadwardians holds a candle to classic Vertigo. Abnett uses Vampires and Zombies in a way that feels completely novel and appropriate for the Victorian setting. Classic horror tropes were cleverly used to convey social commentary about class, but never felt like it overshadowed the narrative, a trap that many "comics with a message" fall into. With an artist like Eddie Campbell or Rick Geary, The New Deadwardians would be on par with the best of Vertigo, but the art by I.N.J. Culbard was very bland.