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Lee helped make the ’90s the decade of the X-Men, but he’s far from the only great artist that has graced the comics of Marvel’s merry mutants. Over the decades, the publisher has made sure that the team has had the best artists that money can buy, leading to some all-time great visuals. These seven X-Men artists aren’t Jim Lee, but they are phenomenal.
7) Joe Madureira

Joe Madureira is one of the most popular artists of the ’90s, and made his name on Uncanny X-Men. He drew issues #312-313, 316-317, 325-326, 328-330, 332, 334-338, 340-343, 345-348, and 350, as well as Astonishing X-Men #1-4. Madureira’s manga influenced style was unique back then — he popularized this style of art in American comics — and he was heavily influenced by legendary mangaka Masamune Shirow. He wasn’t the fastest penciler out there, but when he was at his best (basically every issue he drew post-Astonishing to #350) is fantastic. He’s a great, and it’s shame he couldn’t draw faster, honestly.
6) Chris Bachalo

Chris Bachalo got noticed at DC, working on horror books like The Sandman, Shade the Changing Man, Death: The High Coast of Living, and Death: The Time of Your Life. He moved to Marvel for Generation X, and then got the nod for Uncanny X-Men in 1997. Since then, he’s drawn Uncanny X-Men #349, 353-356, 358-36-, 362-365, 464-468, 472, and 600, Uncanny X-Men (Vol. 3) #1-4, 8-9, 12-14, 16-17, 19-22, 25, 27, 29-32, New X-Men #142-145, X-Men (Vol. 2) #188-190, 192-193, 197-200, 205-207, Wolverine and the X-Men #1-3, 8-10, 12, 16, and 42. He drew X-Men books for over 20 years, and his unique style, which melded American horror comics with manga, has been a favorite of fans for years.
5) Andy Kubert

Andy Kubert grew up in the comic business. His father was legendary DC writer/artist Joe Kubert, and he helped ink and letter his father’s books while he was a teenager. Eventually, he and brother Adam got their start at DC Comics, with Andy eventually getting fill-in issues of Uncanny X-Men before taking over X-Men (Vol. 2) after Lee left the book. Kubert drew Uncanny X-Men (Vol. 1) #279-280, and 288, X-Men (Vol. 3) #14-20, 22-26, 28-34, 36-38, 40-41, 44-47, 50, 52-57, and 59, Amazing X-Men (Vol. 1) #1-4, and Ultimate X-Men #5-6 and 50-53. Kubert picked up Lee’s baton and ran with it, giving readers some excellent imagery. Art sold books in the ’90s, and Kubert’s skill kept the book flying off the spinner racks in the ’90s.












