File:SterankoCaptAm-page.jpg

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Fair-use rationale

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Non-free media data
Description

Page from "Captain America" #111 (March 1969). Art by Jim Steranko and Joe Sinnott.

Source
Author
Portion used

Full page, a fraction (1/36th) of the issue

Low resolution?

Yes

Other information

All Marvel Comics characters and the distinctive likeness(es) thereof are TM & © Marvel Comics, © 1969 Marvel Characters, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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Non-free media rationale for Jim Steranko
Article

Jim Steranko

Purpose of use

Illustration of specific points within the articles. Comic books are a visual medium, and no article about a comic-book artist can be comprehensive and encyclopedic without limited, targeted examples of his or her comic art. The article discusses Steranko's three issues of Captain America, significant as one of only two Marvel Comics superhero series he ever illustrated; no X-Men image is used here, so this is the article's sole example of his Marvel superhero work. As well, as the caption for this image at the article states, this image represents an example of Steranko's "trademark surrealism"; this artist's specific take on that school of art, which was rare if not unprecedented in comic books in 1969, could not be adequately described by text alone and is a significant part of the artist's notability.

Replaceable?

No free use image available.

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Non-free media rationale – WARNING: The Strange Death of Captain America does not appear to exist!
Check capitalization. Enter only the exact title of a single article with no [[link brackets]] or other formatting. It is also possible the indicated article was deleted.
Article

The Strange Death of Captain America

Purpose of use

Illustration of specific points within the articles. Comic books are a visual medium, and no article about a comic-book artist can be comprehensive and encyclopedic without limited, targeted examples of his or her comic art. The article discusses Steranko's three issues of Captain America, significant as one of only two Marvel Comics superhero series he ever illustrated; no X-Men image is used here, so this is the article's sole example of his Marvel superhero work. As well, as the caption for this image at the article states, this image represents an example of Steranko's "trademark surrealism"; this artist's specific take on that school of art, which was rare if not unprecedented in comic books in 1969, could not be adequately described by text alone and is a significant part of the artist's notability.

Replaceable?

No free use image available.

Licensing

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