Award-winning   comic-book creator Brian Michael Bendis is one of the most successful writers in the industry today.   In addition to an acclaimed run on Daredevil, he has helmed a renaissance for Marvel’s popular Avengers franchise and written the   event projects House of M,   Secret War, Secret Invasion, Siege, Age   of Ultron and Civil War   II. Bendis wrote every issue of Ultimate Spider-Man from its launch   in 1999 before bringing his multiracial Spider-Man, Miles Morales, to the   Marvel Universe for continuing adventures. He took on Marvel’s mutants in the   pages of All-New X-Men   and Uncanny X-Men, and   launched Guardians of the Galaxy into the stratosphere. Bendis shook up the life of Tony Stark   in Invincible Iron Man   and related titles, introducing Riri Williams as Ironheart, and then   assembled street-level heroes Luke Cage, Iron Fist, Daredevil and his   co-creation Jessica Jones in Defenders. His creator-owned projects include Scarlet   with Alex Maleev, Brilliant with Mark Bagley, and Takio and the Eisner Award-winning Powers   with Michael Avon Oeming.
Robert   Kirkman began his meteoric rise to fame with his   self-published Battle Pope. For Image Comics, Kirkman created and continues to write the   long-running Invincible   and The Walking Dead, the latter of which   AMC has turned into a smash-hit TV series. Kirkman’s Marvel credits include Marvel Knights 2099, Jubilee, Marvel   Team-Up and Irredeemable   Ant-Man. His best-known Marvel works, however,   have been the blockbuster Marvel Zombies and Marvel Zombies 2 miniseries, and the Marvel Zombies:   Dead Days one-shot.
The   co-creator of Marvel’s Runaways,   Brian K. Vaughan has   written multiple Marvel limited series, including Chamber, Doctor Strange: The Oath, Hood, Mystique and Spider-Man/Doctor Octopus: Negative Exposure. Vaughan earned a reputation as one of the industry’s   brightest talents on projects including Y: The   Last Man, Ex Machina and the critically acclaimed graphic novel Pride of Baghdad, and continues to   wow readers with Saga.   Vaughan has earned multiple Eisner Awards for many of these titles, and for Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Season Eight. He also served as a writer and producer on the TV phenomenon Lost.
Artist   David Finch got his big break   at age 20 illustrating Ripclaw for Top Cow Productions. Later moving to Marvel, his work on The Call of Duty and Ultimate X-Men helped establish him   as one of industry’s top talents. “Avengers Disassembled” shot him into the   rarefied air of comics’ most popular artists, and he continued the transition   to New Avengers with   writer Brian Michael Bendis.
An   industry veteran, artist Brandon Peterson got his big break penciling Uncanny   X-Men. Following a stint at Top Cow, Peterson   returned to Marvel — illustrating such titles as Magneto   Rex, Astonishing X-Men and X-Men.   Since serving as CrossGen’s lead artist, art director and vice president,   Peterson’s Marvel credits include such series as Ultimate   X-Men, Ultimate   Extinction and Strange.
After   an artistic apprenticeship under famed father Joe Kubert, Andy   Kubert got his start on DC’s space-opera   variations Adam Strange   and Warlord, as well as   the best-selling crossover Batman vs. Predator in collaboration with brother Adam. Kubert’s Marvel career   began with a six-year stint on X-Men — continuing into Thor, Ka-Zar,   Ghost Rider and others.   He collaborated with Orson Scott Card on Ultimate   Iron Man, Neil Gaiman on Marvel   1602 and Paul Jenkins on Wolverine:   Origin.