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  1. The Avengers (comic book) The Avengers. (comic book) The Avengers #1 (September 1963). Cover art by Jack Kirby and Dick Ayers featuring the five original members of the team: Ant-Man, the Wasp, Iron Man, Hulk, and Thor. The Avengers is the name of several comic book titles featuring the team the Avengers and published by Marvel Comics ...

  2. Art by Dick Ayers and Chic Stone “Counter-Attack” (ManTech Robot Warriors #2, December 1984) was written by Rich Margopoulos. The warriors find a valley filled with odorous giant plants. The scent of these plants make them sleepy before killer vines come for them. Beyond. Art by Jim Lawson

  3. Henry C. Kiefer, Alex Blum and Norman Nodel were the primary inhouse artists; other contributo­rs included Matt Baker, Ann Brewer, Dik Browne, Joe Orlando, Jack Kirby and Dick Ayers. The first edition of “Classics Illustrate­d: A Cultural History,” came out in 2002; it was hailed as one of the best exploratio­ns of any comic book genre ever.

  4. Cover art by Jack Kirby (penciler) & Dick Ayers (inker).At that point, Goodman attempted a new direction by following the current drive-in science fiction-movie trend, launching or revamping six titles to offer that genre of story: Strange Worlds #1; World of Fantasy #15; Strange Tales #67; Journey into Mystery #50; Tales of Suspense #1; and ...

  5. Ask Price: $9,250. Your bid: $. ComicLink is the Online Vintage Comic Book and Comic Art auction destination featuring comic book auctions spotlighting the most desirable CGC Graded examples of key comics, as well as Comic Art Auctions featuring the biggest names in comic book illustration from the Golden Age to the present.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Steve_DitkoSteve Ditko - Wikipedia

    Working with that same writer and others, Ditko drew a handful of the Fly, Flygirl and Jaguar stories for The Fly #2–8 (July 1983 – Aug. 1984), for Archie Comics' short-lived 1980s superhero line; in a rare latter-day instance of Ditko inking another artist, he inked penciler Dick Ayers on the Jaguar story in The Fly #9 (Oct. 1984).

  7. This two-parter from TALES TO ASTONISH introduces the Abomination, who is essentially a bigger, more monstrous and more powerful version of the title character. Kane swipes a bunch of compositions in these two stories from an early Jack Kirby battle between the Thing and the Hulk. But he makes them his own.