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Mike Zeck

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Nationality
  
American

Area(s)
  
Artist

Name
  
Mike Zeck


Mike Zeck 40mediatumblrcom205ebea11abbd3d47082ef885ae12a

Born
  
September 6, 1949 (age 74) Greenville, Pennsylvania (
1949-09-06
)

Notable works
  
Captain America "Kraven's Last Hunt" Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars Master of Kung-Fu The Punisher

Education
  
Ringling College of Art and Design

Books
  
Captain America: Deathlok Lives, Damned, The Punisher

Similar People
  
Jim Shooter, J M DeMatteis, Sal Buscema, Doug Moench, Mark Gruenwald

Mike zeck interview at heroes aren t hard to find


Michael J. Zeck (born September 6, 1949), known professionally as Mike Zeck, is an American comics artist. He is best known for his work for Marvel Comics on such series as Captain America, Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars, Master of Kung-Fu, and The Punisher as well as the "Kraven's Last Hunt" storyline in the Spider-Man titles.

Contents

Mike Zeck Mike Zeck Comic Artist Gallery of the Most Popular

Early life

Mike Zeck THE PUNISHER BY MIKE ZECK by NOMAD316 on DeviantArt

Mike Zeck was born in Greenville, Pennsylvania, to Michael and Kathryn Jean Zeck. He attended the Ringling School of Art in 1967, and after graduation worked at the Migrant Education Center in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

Career

Mike Zeck Mike Zeck Lambiek Comiclopedia

Zeck began his comics career in 1974, doing illustration assignments for the text stories in Charlton Comics' animated line of comics, which led to work on their horror titles. During this period he lived briefly in the Derby, Connecticut, area where Charlton was headquartered.

Mike Zeck httpsrosecitycomicconcomwpcontentuploads20

In 1977, Zeck started working for Marvel Comics on Master of Kung Fu with writer Doug Moench. In 2010, Comics Bulletin ranked Moench and Zeck's work on Master of Kung-Fu sixth on its list of the "Top 10 1970s Marvels". Zeck later worked on Captain America and drew covers for G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero.

Mike Zeck Mike Zeck Comic Artist Gallery of the Most Popular Comic Art

Zeck illustrated the Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars limited series in 1984. For this series, he designed a new black-and-white costume temporarily worn by Spider-Man. The plot that developed as a result of Spider-Man's acquisition of the costume led to the creation of the Spider-Man villain known as Venom.

Mike Zeck Mike Zeck Comic Artist Gallery of the Most Popular Comic Art

In 1986, Zeck collaborated with writer Steven Grant on a Punisher miniseries which was later collected as The Punisher: Circle Of Blood and an original hardcover graphic novel of the character three years later.

Mike Zeck The Punisher Oscar Jimenez Comic Art Pinterest Punisher

Zeck illustrated the 1987 Spider-Man storyline "Kraven's Last Hunt", written by his former Captain America collaborator J. M. DeMatteis, which is considered to be one of the quintessential stories in Spider-Man's history, as well as the definitive Kraven the Hunter storyline. DeMatteis remarked, "Because Mike nailed the plot elements so perfectly in his pencils—every action, every emotion, was there, clear as a bell—I didn’t have to worry about belaboring those elements in the captions or dialogue. I was free to do those interior monologues that were so important to the story. If any other artist had drawn “Kraven’s Last Hunt” ... it wouldn’t have been the same story." In 2004, Zeck's cover of Web of Spider-Man #32, which depicts Spider-Man escaping the grave into which he has been interred by Kraven, was recreated as a 12-inch tall resin diorama statue by Dynamic Forces.

Mike Zeck 83 best Mike Zeck images on Pinterest Marvel comics Comic books

Zeck has worked for DC Comics as well. He contributed to Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe in the mid-1980s. Zeck drew the covers for the "Ten Nights of the Beast" storyline in Batman #417–420 (March–June 1988) and these covers were later collected in a portfolio. His other credits for the publisher include Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight, Legends of the DC Universe, and Deathstroke, The Terminator. In 1999, he collaborated with writer Mark Waid on The Kingdom (illustrating issue #2, with Ariel Olivetti illustrating issue #1), a sequel to Kingdom Come.


Mike Zeck Marvel Comics of the 1980s Some Mike Zeck love

References

Mike Zeck Wikipedia