George Perez to benefit Linda Blair's charity, WorldHeart FoundationFrom Vu
WORLDHEART FOUNDATION AUCTION (Clan McDonald Comics) (06 Mar 2021)
Auction
You can win a George Perez custom pencil/ink art, to benefit Linda Blair's animal rescue organization, WorldHeart Foundation. Minimum bid is $1,000. Auction starts March 6, 2021... Unfortunately details are hidden behind a private Clan McDonald's Facebook page. Details from theconventioncollective.com: Thanks to The Artist’s Choice a LOT of comic book artists will be doing 11×17 (A3) commissions with all proceeds benefiting Linda Blair’s WorldHeart Foundation. Some of the artists will include such notable names as Bill Sienkiewicz, Walt Simonson, John Romita Jr., Bob Layton, David Finch, and many more artists. The full list is below along with the type ...
Posted by Vu Nguyen
George Pérez
Pat Broderick
Jim Aparo
Dick Giordano
Gil Kane
Carmine Infantino
Brian Bolland
Joe Kubert
Terry Austin
Brett Breeding
Frank Giacoia
Joe Kubert School
colors:
N/A
letters:
N/A
editor:
N/A
Related
JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #200 (Mar 1982)
DC Comics
JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #200 (Digital) (24 Sep 2011)
DC Comics
JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #4 (Australia) (Aug 1984)
On a related topic: favorite all-time issues? Well, I obviously have
great affinity for that Star Wars, and I hold Uncanny X-Men #125 in
high regard, as it was my first association with the merry mutants.
But my favorite comic of all time still has to be Justice League of
America #200. It's the later-eight members of the League vs. the
original seven, who were possessed by the aliens they fought in their
first adventure. You had 72 pages (with a spine!), a cracking good
story by Gerry Conway and art by George Perez, Brian Bolland, Pat
Broderick, Dick Giordano, Carmine Infantino, Joe Kubert, Jim Aparo,
and Gil Kane. In my mind that will always be tough to beat.
I broach this topic with you for a
couple of reasons. I’m always genuinely interested as to why or how
people get into certain things. And I wonder why the readership is
regarded as “shrinking”. Consider the surfeit of comics films that are
out these days, couple that with the popularity of Justice League on
Cartoon Network, and multiply by the old-school issuances on DVD.
Factor in ABC Family’s prodigious Marvel animated block, and I wonder
why the transition isn’t being made. Are kids just sticking with video
games? Is the audience gravitating to manga? Or is the loss of the
grocery store spinner rack more devastating than we thought?
DAILY PLANET
volume 81, issue #19
December 1981
editor: Bob Rozakis
production: Jodi Saviuk
JLA REACHES #200
SPECTACULAR CELEBRATION STORY SCHEDULED
(DC, New
York) - it's time for the 200th issue of JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA and
to celebrate the occasion, editor Len Wein is preparing an 80-page
spectacular tale featuring the artwork of some of the greatest artists
in comics.
Gerry Conway is the scripter of this fabulous adventure which includes a framing sequence drawn by JLA-regular George Pérez and individual chapters by a variety of pencillers: Superman and Hawkman join forces in the hands of Joe Kubert; Carmine Infantino handles the teamwork of the The Flash and J'onn J'onzz in pages penciled by Pat Broderick; Jim Aparo serves up the team of Aquaman, Red Tornado and the Phantom Stranger; Wonder Woman and Zatanna combine magic and mythology courtesy of Dick Giordano; Gil Kane unites The Atom and Green Lantern; and Batman, Green Arrow and Black Canary are brought together again thanks to Brian Bolland.
It's a special package that's well worth
the $1.50 cover price, so get to your comics dealer early the week of
December 3rd to make sure you don't miss JUSTICE LEAGUE #200 !