“WHAT IF Conan the Barbarian walked the Earth Today?”, by John Buscema, with Inks by Ernie Chan, Letters by Joe Rosen, Colors by Glynis Wein, and a Script by Roy Thomas.
Rob Liefeld with a good inker is a sight to behold.
Inks by Scott Williams, Jon Sibal, Norm Rapmund, Todd McFarlane, Hillary Barta, Ernie Chan, and Joe Rubinstein.
Savage Sword of Conan, Vol. 1 # 100 Pages 48-49, by John Buscema, with Inks by Ernie Chan, Letters by Joe Rosen, and a Script by Michael Fleisher.
Original and final cover art by Ernie Chan from The House of Secrets #130, published by DC Comics, April 1975.
John Buscema: the Michelangelo of Comics Big John illustrated a splash originally intended for use in the Silver Surfer: Day of Judgment Graphic Novel, but it was not used. from the top, his (partially inked) artwork was finished by: -Pablo Marcos. -Tony DeZuniga. -Ernie Chan. -Danny Bulanadi. -Alex Nino. -Rudy Nebres. -and Joe Sinnott gave it the subtitle of ‘the Siren Song’, and his version was used for a limited edition print entitled, quite appropriately, “John Buscema: the Michelangelo of Comics”.
a portfolio of PinUps from the Savage Sword of Conan, illustrated by Ernie Chan.
Star Wars - art by Ernie Chan (1978)
Original and final cover art by Ernie Chan from House of Secrets #134, published by DC Comics, August 1975.
Man-Thing And Hulk by Jim Starlin And Ernie Chan
Conan the Barbarian, Vol. 1 # 118, by John Buscema, with inks by Ernie Chan and colors by George Roussos.
time for some classic Incredible Hulk PinUps!
In the same order as the images, the artwork is by:
Walt Simonson.
John Romita, Jr.
Mike Zeck.
Mike Zeck.
Gene Colan and Rudy Nebres.
Steve Bissette.
Gene Colan and Bob Wiacek.
Ernie Chan.
Rich Buckler.
Brent Anderson.
John Buscema and Ernie Chan’s Conan the Barbarian, Vol. 1 # 88.
http://monsterhoodoo.tumblr.com posted the original art, so please go check that blog. Like, now.
Conan The Barbarian #94 (1978), #105 (1979) and #109 (1980) by Roy Thomas, John Buscema and Ernie Chan, from the private collection of Mario Losada. Thanks, Mario!
Great art team here. Rarely bettered.
Every splash features Conan as the central aspect of the image. Every image draws your focus to Conan, and every splash page makes you want to find out what happens next.
THAT is how it is done.
THAT is why Jim Lee is a PinUp artist instead of a comic book artist.
Frontispiece by Jim Starlin and Ernie Chan from Rampaging Hulk magazine #7, published by Marvel, February 1978.