Greg Goldstein's Comic Art Gallery

George Perez — Avengers & JLA, Assemble!

Avengers / JLA #4, May 2004

Captain Marvel fighting alongside… Captain Marvel? Only on this great battle page by the legendary George Perez from the Justice League / Avengers crossover that took more than 20 years to make happen.

And, appropriately, 2024 is the 20th anniversary of its publication. Twenty years ago? How on Earth (1,2, or 616) did that happen?

(Thanks to pal and super collector Michael Lovitz for parting with this one.)

John Buscema — Man On Fire

Sub-Mariner #3, June 1968

Five straight weeks in the Spring of 1968. Five comic book issues drawn by the legendary John Buscema:

Sub-Mariner #3

Avengers #53

Sub-Mariner #4

Avengers #54

Silver Surfer #1 (38 pages)

Gems. Every single one. (And yes, I might be biased, because these comics are from my newsstand-era sweet spot — 1967-1973 — but I’m not wrong.) My guess is that only Jack Kirby ever had an achievement similar, or greater.

This Sub-Mariner page featuring Namor and Triton is the best Buscema superhero page I’ve ever owned, and unless an amazing opportunity comes my way, will likely remain that way. 

Dynamic inks from one of John’s favorite inkers, Frank Giacoia.

All action. 

Just terrific.

Walter Simonson, Scott Hanna & Brian Bendis — Red Hulk, Frequent Flyer

Avengers #28September 2012

Ten years ago, I purchased this terrific Avengers double page spread by Walter Simonson and Scott Hanna from Scott’s art representative at New York Comic-Con. Scott was at the convention, but I never managed to track him down. Walter was there, so he signed it before I returned to California, but since it was inks over blue-line printed pencils, it definitely needed Scott’s signature as well.

Problem was, I kept forgetting about it during my convention travels.

Finally, coming out of the pandemic two years ago, I see that Scott will be at Baltimore Comic-Con, so I pack it up, fly back East and… he needs to cancel. That’s not on him — a lot of creators cancelled in 2021, many because Covid had started raging again and travel stunk.

Flash forward to a few weeks ago, he’s an announced guest at BCC, so I bring it again, and voila, I catch up to him.  Signature acquired.

And as a bonus, when I remind Walter about the piece, writer Brian Bendis happens to stop by, so I end up with a cool bonus signature as well. (He was genuinely delighted to see the original art — writers often don’t see the originals before they make their way back to the artists and/or disappear into the collectors’ market.)

If you’re counting, that’s 12,500 miles of travel for that piece of art.

I should have signed it up for a frequent flyer account.

Mike Machlan — Avengers #2, Redux

Marvel Fanfare #41, December 1988

Mike Machlan adds his own flavor to the classic match-up of The Avengers vs. the Space Phantom (Avengers #2) in this published pin-up from Marvel fanfare #41. Mike did a few of these classic interpretations as a portfolio in this issue, each with a different inker. (John Beatty provides finishes here.)

I’ve always enjoyed Machlan’s art. I understand that health reasons cut his career short, which, goes without saying, is a terrible shame.

Separately, I’ve gone on record saying that the first four issues of the Avengers are the craziest (in a positive way) and most colorful start to any series in the Silver Age — if not ever:

Issue #1 —The Avengers (Ant-man, Wasp, Thor Iron Man, Hulk) form to fight Loki, and despite Hulk’s reticence they agree to become a team. Wasp provides the name “Avengers.”

Issue #2 — Ant-Man is now Giant-Man, and this time the Space Phantom (instead of Loki) manipulates the Hulk (and the rest of the group) — and after a big fight, ol’ greenskin gets angry and runs-off.

Issue #3 – The remaining Avengers chase after the Hulk and run into the Namor the Sub-Mariner along the way. Iron Man wears new armor, everyone gets into a big fight, and the Hulk runs off. Again. Namor escapes to the sea. Cameos by Spider-man, The X-Men and The Fantastic Four.

Issue #4 — Namor, now really, really angry, starts hurling some icebergs around, and it turns out Captain America is frozen in one of them, although Subby swims off before he can discover that. The Avengers revive Cap (good thing they have a submarine), and after they tussle, and he comprehends he’s been in suspended animation for 20 years, he joins them.

Whew.

John Romita Jr. & Klaus Janson— Heroes Return!

Thor #1, July 1998

It’s the Avengers vs. the Destroyer in this great action page from the first issue of the underrated reboot of the Thor mythos. Dan Jurgens wrote the series and John Romita Jr. and Klaus Janson provided the visual storytelling for the launch.

Cool bonus feature: Both artists signed the page the year the issue was published.

Marvel definitely floundered after the Image exodus in 1991, but by the late 90s stated putting the comic book pieces back together as evidenced here and in the launch of the Marvel Knights imprint, produced by Joe Quesada and Jimmy Palmiotti. The Ultimate universe came along a few years later, and the rest, as they say is history.

Bob Layton — The New Line-Up!

Commission, All-Star Squadron #1 Mash-up with Avengers #150 and #151, 2007

Bob Layton has some fun reimagining the cover of DC’s All-Star Squadron #1 (Rich Buckler, artist) as an Avengers “changing of the guard” issue.

Also fun — Bob uses the trade dress for issue #150 (1976) of the Avengers own comic book, a fill in issue that primarily features a reprint of the first major line-up change in issue #16. The actual line-up changes in #151.  

It was clearly all meant to be a single story in #150, but… the dreaded deadline of doom strikes again.

Sal Buscema & Tom Palmer— Day Of The Man-Ape

Avengers #78, July 1970

Sal Buscema brings us a fantastic panel page featuring an over the top Man-Ape (M’Baku) defeating Black Panther and threatening the entire Avengers team. (Spoiler alert — he’s about to introduce us to the entire original Lethal Legion for the first time on the very next page.)

This issue is from mid 1970 — a classic period, as the Silver Age ends and the Bonze Age begins — and if I couldn’t find the monthly issue of Avengers at my local candy store, I would hunt it down somewhere. 

That, by the way, happened frequently. (Did your comics newsstand care which issues actually came in or sold out? I don’t think mine did.)

My obsession was a great way to get some exercise.

Tom Grummett — Killing It Like Buscema

Chaos War: Dead Avengers #2, February 2011

Tom Grummett delivers a terrific modern homage to John Buscema’s original cover to Avengers # 52 from the “classic” Buscema era.

I’m not sure how you kill a “Dead” Avenger (I never did catch-up to this crossover) but the art is cool regardless.

We continue with our 60th anniversary celebration of the first appearance of the Avengers.

See you Tuesday.

Sal Buscema — Avengers Assembled!

Avengers #68, Cover Re-creation, 2002

Sal Buscema delivers a perfect recreation of his classic cover for Avengers #68 featuring the entire team concerned, shall we say — about the current health of The Vision.

Sal got a lot of mileage of these kinds of group shots.  (See Below.) 

Apparently, the cover of Marvelmania was actually his tryout piece for the series, and obviously he knocked it out of the park. (No surprise.) One lucky collector owns the original.

That illustration didn’t appear in color until it was used as a pin-up in a Marvel Treasury reprint (Jack Kirby Cover), years later.

Meanwhile, a third similar group shot appeared as a story end page, although we haven’t been able to track down its provenance — yet.

We continue with our 60th anniversary celebration of the first appearance of the Avengers.

See you Friday.

John Buscema — Avengers Melee

Avengers #44, September 1967

The legendary John Buscema took over the regular art chores on The Avengers a few issues prior to this one, and quickly makes the series his own. 

In this second part of the story that introduces the Red Guardian to the Marvel Universe, we present a terrific action page that pretty much captures the melee madness of the cover.

(Spoiler alert: Turns out the Black widow wasn’t really a widow. But, as always, we digress.)

Welcome to the 60th anniversary (!) of the Avengers, who debuted as a team in 1963. 

To be continued…