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#Pia Guerra
allcheers-allfears · 1 year
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he’s a man
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balu8 · 6 months
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Mike Dringenberg: Destiny, Death and Dream
Matias Bergara: Delirium
Eduardo Risso: Death and Dream
Pia Guerra_ The Endless
Source C. Rob (comicartfans)
Comic Art Gallery of Rob C. at ComicArtFans.com
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femmefataleart · 11 months
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Red Sonja by Pia Guerra
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Black Canary 6 Looney Tunes variant cover 2015. This is one of the variants I collaborated on, here with Pia Guerra, myself providing three of the four birds, for the lineup. (See previous post for the pencils I did and more info on the project)
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modularmedia · 1 year
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Analytical Fanboys Discuss Y The Last Man!
The latest episode of our media club podcast is here! This month, @thevacuuminator gets @boingo-rider, @snowburke & @busterscorp to read Y The Last Man!
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Cartoonists passionately take on the Supreme Court’s abortion decision
Above are two cartoons by one of the cartoonists (Pia Guerra) featured in this Post article. Below is an excerpt about those cartoons:
Pia Guerra drew two cartoons: In one, a Republican elephant pops champagne in celebration while standing over a bleeding woman’s motionless body; in another, Death as apocalyptic horseman grips a scythe topped by a coat hanger — that symbol of unsafe abortions that visual artists employ as shorthand for imperiled reproductive rights.
Watching the news, Guerra saw “conservatives actually celebrating this ruling” with “not even a little pretense of solemnity — just full-on laughing in the faces of women. They don’t give a crap about those who need this health care, that there are women right now being diverted out of state for lifesaving treatment because hospitals don’t want to risk being sued.
“That level of callousness only says this is in no way about ‘protecting the unborn,’” the Vancouver, B.C.-based artist adds, “but about punishing women for daring to claim autonomy. It’s disgusting.”
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saywhat-politics · 2 years
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Hands On Presidency
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classicartverso · 2 months
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Pia Guerra - Black Canary
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Other polls about comics, lit and art in my pinned post.
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speakfeed · 10 months
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Tears of a Clown
Pia Guerra
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ultrameganicolaokay · 2 years
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DC Horror presents Sgt. Rock vs. The Army of the Dead #1 by Bruce Campbell and Eduardo Risso. Cover (1) by Gary Frank. Variant covers by (2) Francesco Francavilla, (3) Charlie Adlard and (4) Pia Guerra. Out in September.
“Berlin, 1944. The Nazis are besieged on all fronts by the Allied forces. Defeat is inevitable. But Hitler and his team of evil scientists attempt a last-ditch effort that may turn the tide of the war and rewrite history itself: a serum that resurrects their dead soldiers, stronger than they were in life, and sends them back into the battlefield. Now Sgt. Frank Rock and Easy Company have been dispatched into enemy territory to face off against the strangest, most horrific enemies they’ve ever encountered: Nazi zombies! Horror icon Bruce Campbell and comics legend Eduardo Risso bring you a terror-soaked Sgt. Rock tale like no other!”
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semper-legens · 1 year
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155. Y: The Last Man, book one, by Brian K. Vaughan and Pia Guerra
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Owned: No, library Page count: 246 My summary: One day, for no reason anyone could divine, all of the men on Earth died at once. Everyone with a Y chromosome fell prey to this sweeping arm of death - except two. Yorick, and his pet monkey. Now the world is in ruins, but all Yorick wants is to find his girlfriend who is half the world away. But everyone else wants him dead... My rating: 2/5 My commentary:
I had heard good things about this comic, despite its premise being a bit wonky, and I come away ridiculously disappointed by it. I’m sorry, this story was just not interesting. The assumptions that it makes about gender, the criticisms it makes towards feminism, the blandness of the main character...I didn’t see much in it to like, and I am definitely not going to be reading the rest.
My main beef with the story is the Amazons, a feminist group that appears after the men die for...some reason. They’re crazy! They burn sperm banks, believe all men are evil and should be killed (despite that having, you know, happened as far as they know), and burn off a breast to make archery easier for...some reason. They’re hateful and villainous and, like, this isn’t what a lot of feminism is. Oh sure, radfems are like this in real life, but this is less a nuanced criticism of radical feminist thought and more LOOK AT ALL THOSE MAN-HATIN’ FEMINISTS, THEY SURE ARE EVIL, you know what I mean? I really question why a group like this would appear after all the men are dead.
Secondarily, the assumptions this book makes about gender are...questionable? I don’t doubt that the stats it quotes about which professions have now lost a lot of their personnel are accurate to 2002, when this first released, but just because 99% of all electricians, say, are dead, doesn’t mean that nobody with those skills survived. You can know how to do a thing and not be a professional in that field. Where are all the car-fixin’ butch lesbians? And would all the men dying necessarily cause an apocalyptic scenario like this? It’s not like, historically, in scenarios without men, women haven’t just. Got on with things. Like in the world wars, or in towns where all the men were killed in mines or at sea.
You notice how I’ve gotten this far without talking about the main character? That’s because Yorick is boring as fuck. He’s just a generic straight white guy. Everyone else wants to bone and/or murder him (in a gender-swapped version of this, girl!Yorick would almost certainly be immediately enslaved for breeding, but guy!Yorick gets to wander around and be free through the power of manliness) but all he wants is to find his boring girlfriend and be boring together. There are so many characters in this sort of world I would want to follow, and the narrative is not interested in any of them.
And, I’m sorry, this book’s treatment of trans people is disgusting. Not only have all trans women and transfeminine people been murdered out of hand by this mysterious plague that only affects people with a Y chromosome (chromosomes are not that simple, but I digress), but the one time the series acknowledges trans men is by a character mentioning a boyfriend, then to say that ‘she’ was a ‘tr*nny’ who was murdered by the Amazons despite not being a ‘real’ guy. I don’t think I need to say why this is horrible.
Next up, something far better - history, and a cautionary tale about getting trapped in the Antarctic ice.
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stephenist · 2 years
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Big birds - Tweety (Hyde style), Beaky Buzzard and Foghorn Leghorn in a lineup together with DC’s Black Canary (to be inserted later by comic book artist Pia Guerra) for a variant comic book cover from 2015. This was one of 25 covers featuring DC characters and Looney Tunes that I provided drawings for. DC art director Mark Chiarello supplied me with rough concepts for the covers showing how everything should work, and I submitted drawings, sometimes multiple versions, of the characters, which were then passed on to the DC cover artists to be included in the final. 
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apaneladay · 2 years
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Brian K. Vaughan (writer), Pia Guerra (artist) Y The Last Man #1 (2002) Published by Vertigo (DC Comics)
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saywhat-politics · 2 years
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In The Line of Fire.
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