Comicbook

Marvel & ESPN The Magazine Announce The Body Issue: Super Heroes Edition

As part of ESPN the Magazine’s annual Body issue, the magazine will include a special The Body […]

As part of ESPN the Magazine’s annual Body issue, the magazine will include a special The Body Issue: Super Heroes Edition insert, featuring Iron Man, She-Hulk, Ant-Man, Captain Marvel, Daredevil, Medusa, Hulk, Iron Fist, and Luke Cage.

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ESPN.com will host an exclusive digital sketch book offering a behind-the-scenes look at the insert’s art, showing how ESPN & Marvel Comics worked together in an attempt to honor both the male and female form through detailed anatomical drawings.

“For a comic book artist drawing the human anatomy is an everyday job,” says artist Sara Pichelli in a press release. “But here it was matter of celebrating the maximum expression of human muscles and shapes. Creating believable, powerful, and at the same time harmonic bodies is always a challenge, that’s why I wanted to be part of this.”

“While The Body Issue itself celebrates the unique characteristics of each athlete’s physique, we thought it made perfect sense to extend this theme to these Marvel characters,” says ESPN The Magazine Deputy Editor Otto Strong.

“When comic book artists imagine the physical ideal, they have to start somewhere,” says Editor In Chief Axel Alonso. “And let’s face it, professional athletes, whose bodies are fine-tuned instruments, are the closest thing to real-life Super Heroes. Marvel’s Body Issue insert is a celebration of the most iconic Super Heroes in the world and the athletes that inspired them.”

The press release included statements from each of the artists working on the insert. See them, and Jim Cheung’s cover for the insert, below.

DAREDEVIL

“My goal is to make super heroes more human. We look to see ourselves in many masked vigilantes. Not only with Daredevil, but many characters I draw are based on real people. โ€”Alex Maleev

CAPTAIN MARVEL

“I work to combine correct proportions and powerful muscle shapes with a commonly accepted idea of beauty.” โ€”Sara Pichelli

MEDUSA

“Women are more delicate in muscle mass definition, so the secret is to not define each muscle too much.” โ€”Emanuela Lupacchino

LUKE CAGE

“I tend to gravitate toward athletes when it comes to getting a reference for my artwork. Particularly MMA fighters, who have a more functional physique.” โ€”Leinil Francis Yu

SHE-HULK

“She’s a character of power, so I keep her upright: shoulders back, chest outโ€”just a very commanding presence.” โ€”Frank Cho

IRON FIST

“I do tons of reference. I try to get a variety of artists from different time periods to see how different people represented the character. โ€”Russell Dauterman

IRON MAN

“Drawing super heroes? Well, they have to be perfect. They are like modern gods.” โ€”Mike Deodato

HULK

“When I’m illustrating such dynamic figures, background explosions help sell the impact the character is having on the environment around him. The toughest part is trying to show the kinetic energy in a static image.” โ€”Jim Cheung

ANT-MAN

“I always try to have the musculature of something that could possibly exist. Even though everything looks extremely exaggerated, I still want him to look like he can move and be functional.” โ€”Greg Land