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Arvell Jones

Arvell Jones (whose earliest work is billed Arvell Malcolm Jones) is an American comics artist best known for his work for Marvel Comics and for DC Comics and its imprint Milestone Media.

Arvell Jones

Arvell Malcolm Jones
September 5

American

Biography[edit]

Jones and his brother, Desmond, were raised in Detroit, Michigan, and were both active in early comic book fandom.[1] Along with fellow Detroiters and future comics professionals Rich Buckler, Tom Orzechowski, Keith Pollard, Jim Starlin, Al Milgrom, Michael Netzer, and others, Jones worked on the Detroit Triple Fan Fair,[1] one of the earliest comic book conventions, and published the local fanzine Fan Informer; it lasted into 1971.[2] Jones in 2006 recalled how he and his compatriots "would take a 13-hour drive and spend the night with Al Milgrom and his roommate, hang at Rich [Buckler]'s, then go see [art director] John Romita at Marvel, get our butts spanked, and go back to Detroit to work on our samples again."[1]


Jones entered the comics industry as an assistant for Buckler, the first of the Detroit group to enter the field professionally.[1] After helping Buckler on the Black Panther and the Buckler-created cyborg antihero Deathlok, Jones received his first published credit, for art assistance, along with Pollard, on the Buckler-pencilled Thor #228 (cover dated October 1974). He then did pencil "breakdowns"—layouts that break down the plot elements—for all but page one of the 18-page team-up story "The Return of the Living Eraser", starring the Thing and Morbius, the Living Vampire, for Dick Giordano's finished pencils.[3] This eventually ran in Marvel Two-in-One #15 (May 1976).[1] After drawing a spot illustration for the text story "The Atomic Monster" in the Marvel black-and-white horror magazine Monsters Unleashed #9 (Dec. 1974), Jones made his debut as penciller of an 18-page story starring the martial artist superhero Iron Fist in Marvel Premiere #20 (January 1975). He also pencilled the next two Iron Fist stories[3] and co-created the supporting character Misty Knight with writer Tony Isabella.[4] Jones also worked on Iron Man starting with issue #73.


When he moved to DC Comics, Jones worked with writer Gerry Conway on Super-Team Family, which teamed the Atom with various other DC characters.[5] After that title's cancellation, a Supergirl/Doom Patrol team-up drawn by Jones, originally scheduled to appear in Super-Team Family was published in The Superman Family #191–193.[6]


Jones worked on the DC series All-Star Squadron in the mid-1980s, penciling the majority of the issues between 1985 and 1987. He left the comics field for several years to work in television,[7][8] and focused on graphic design work.[9] Jones returned to comics in 1994 to pencil Marvel Comics' Captain America Annual #13, and issues of DC/Milestone Media's Kobalt, Hardware, and Blood Syndicate. His last published comic was Marvel's Daredevil #343 (Aug. 1995), on which he and Keith Pollard did breakdowns, with finished pencils by Tom Palmer.[3]

Official website

at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)

Arvell Jones

at IMDb

Arvell Jones

at Toons Mag

Arvell Jones

at Mike's Amazing World of Comics

Arvell Jones

at the Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators

Arvell Jones

TGTWebcomics, YouTube, June 23, 2010

"Kids Read Comics Interview - Arvell Jones Bonus Story"

The Comic Book Syndicate, YouTube, April 30, 2011

"Arvell Jones Interview!"