Jason   Latour’s kinetic brand of art has appeared in Marvel   titles including Daredevil: Black and White, I Am an Avenger, Wolverine and Captain America. He illustrated the noir graphic novel Noche Roja from Vertigo, as well as B.P.R.D. Hell on Earth: The Pickens County Horror from Dark Horse, and collaborated with Jason Aaron on Scalped. Latour also drew the   comic-book adaptation of Quentin Tarantino’s Django   Unchained. His parallel writing career began with   the creator-owned Loose Ends and continued with stories in the Marvel series Untold Tales of Punisher MAX and A+X. Latour stepped into Ed   Brubaker’s shoes to continue the adventures of Winter   Soldier and took on Wolverine and the X-Men. His   introduction of Spider-Gwen during the Spider-Verse event resulted in a smash-hit spin-off series.
British   writer David Hine has been   scripting comics since the early ’80s on UK indie titles like Crisis and the venerable sci-fi   anthology 2000AD. Many   of these works also featured his pencil art, though in more recent years he   has focused on writing. During the last four years, he’s taken a lead role in   helping sculpt the outer limits of the mutant universe for Marvel. His District X explored life in a New   York City neighborhood populated by mutants, a blend of NYPD Blue-style police drama with   X-Men theatrics. After a solid two-year run, many of Hine’s plot threads   parlayed into the successful Decimation mini-series X-Men:   The 198 and Civil War:   X-Men. In addition to a handful of What If? stories, Hine has also   scripted Silent War, a   miniseries that pitted the Inhumans against Earth and served as a prelude to   the 2009 War of Kings   event. Besides being the writer of Image’s Spawn, Hine has taken on Spider-Man Noir, an alternate-reality series in which Peter Parker and his   famous ensemble are placed in Depression-era New York City. 
A   professional comic-book artist since 2003, Dustin   Weaver’s work on Dark Horse’s Star Wars and King Kong led him to Marvel, where   he’s drawn X-Universe storylines in X-Men:   Kingbreaker, X-Men:   Legacy and the X-Necrosha one-shot. Weaver has collaborated with writer Jonathan Hickman   on two S.H.I.E.L.D.   series, as well as Avengers. He wrote the Rocksteady and Bebop issue of IDW’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Villains Micro-Series and produces the webcomic Amnia   Cycle on his blog.
Richard   Isanove is one of the industry’s premier color artists,   skillfully transforming traditional black-and-white illustrations into richly   rendered final compositions on such series as Wolverine:   Origin, Daredevil:   Father and Neil Gaiman’s 1602.
Artist   Robbi Rodriguez made his debut   in 2005 on Image Comics' Hero Camp, later illustrating such Image titles as Night Club, 24Seven and Hazed. Subsequent credits include   Stephen Colbert's Tek Jansen and the Harvey Award-nominated Maintenance, both published by Oni Press. His early Marvel contributions   included issues of titles such as New Mutants and Wolverine and the X-Men before he wowed readers with Spider-Gwen.
Spanish   artist Pere Pérez has worked   for Moonstone Books (Twilight Crusade: Templar), Devil’s Due (Dragonlance   Chronicles), Dynamite Entertainment (Savage Tales), Valiant Entertainment   (Archer & Armstrong,   Faith) and DC Comics (Action Comics, Batgirl). For Marvel, Pérez has   illustrated Deadpool vs. Punisher, Rogue & Gambit and War of the Realms: X-Men. He joined writer Karla Pacheco on a lengthy, well-received Spider-Woman run.