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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sal_BuscemaSal Buscema - Wikipedia

    Sal Buscema (/ b j uː ˈ s ɛ m ə / bew-SEM-ə; born Silvio Buscema, Italian: [ˈsilvjo buʃˈʃɛːma], on January 26, 1936) is an American comics artist, primarily for Marvel Comics, where he enjoyed a ten-year run as artist of The Incredible Hulk and an eight-year run as artist of The Spectacular Spider-Man.

    • The Incredible Hulk #290: Unholy Alliance! Ms. MODOK. I mean, really, do I need to say anything else? Sal Buscema makes this work. Not to be confused with the far inferior MODAM.
    • The Incredible Hulk #271: This, the first appearance of Rocket Raccoon, has a very long title riffing on the Beatles song his name is taken from that I also don’t feel like typing out.
    • The Incredible Hulk #248: How Green My Garden Grows! Jarella has been dead for 42 issues and Gamma Base has been keeping her corpse all this time because they are dicks.
    • The Incredible Hulk #265: The title of this issue is an extremely long and famous Rolling Stones lyric I am not going to retype. This happens to be the first comic I remember buying with my own money, and I read it until it fell apart.
  2. Jun 25, 2021 · Legendary comics artist Sal Buscema talks about his latest project, a graphic novel by Binge Books, and his six decades of drawing for Marvel, including the Hulk. He shares his insights on inking, penciling, and working with Stan Lee and other legends.

    • Mike Avila
    • Captain America #156. I’m a sucker for any cover where the lead character fights himself (in this case, Captain America, who as has been established could do this all day), and even better when that scene appears amid the wild early 1970s Marvel cover designs.
    • Captain America #168/Power Records #PR12. I ordinarily wouldn’t go back-to-back with the same comic but I particularly love this image, which I first experienced as the cover to one of the debatably classic Power Records “comic and record” sets.
    • Iron Man #34. This cover shouldn’t work—it’s got too many characters for the composition, it features multiple scenes in one image, the largest of which is just a disembodied iron mask, and it’s got multiple word balloons and captions bisecting all of those scenes.
    • Marvel’s Greatest Comics #36. Of Marvel’s many reprint series in the 1970s, most of them used some form of the original comic’s cover art (often poorly colored compared to the original).
  3. Sal Buscema (pronounced: Byou-sema) was born Silvio Buscema in Brooklyn, New York, on January 26, 1936. He is the son of a barber and the youngest of four children, including Alfred, John, and Carol. They are first generation immigrants as their father came to America from Italy in 1973.

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  5. Jun 5, 2019 · Silvio " Sal " Buscema (born January 26, 1936) is an American comics artist, primarily known for his work at Marvel Comics - where he enjoyed a ten-year run as the artist of The Incredible Hulk. He is the younger brother of comics artist John Buscema. Like John, Sal attended the High School of Music & Art, graduating in 1955.

  6. Jan 18, 2021 · Buscema honed it a bit (Hulk does a similar punch to Namor in #34) before finally breaking out the first "Sal Buscema Punch" in Sub-Mariner #35, where guest-star Thor punches guest-star Hulk... The very next issue, Buscema has Namor punch out Attuma the same way and a visual trademark was confirmed.

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