| Ed Benes | |
|---|---|
| Born | José Edilbenes Bezerra (1972-11-20)November 20, 1972 (age 53) |
| Area | Penciller,Inker |
Notable works | Birds of Prey Justice League of America, vol. 2 Supergirl, vol. 3 Superman, vol. 2 WildC.A.T.S. |
José Edilbenes Bezerra (born November 20, 1972), better known by his professional nameEd Benes, is a Brazilian comic book artist, known for his work forDC Comics, on such titles asBirds of Prey,Supergirl,Superman, andJustice League of America.
José Edilbenes Bezerra was born November 20, 1972, inAlto Santo, a small town in theBrazilian state ofCeará, in the northeast region of the country. He has lived inLimoeiro do Norte, a medium town also in Ceará state, since he was 14 years old. He began drawing on his own in 1989, referencing the artwork from his brother's comic books. He also took a correspondence art course, though he did not finish it.[1]
Benes got his first professional work in 1993, after he mailed out sample art, and was discovered byNeal Adams, who gave him the job of illustratingSamuree forContinuity Comics in 1993.[1] In the 1990s Benes began to work forMarvel where he did art for multiple comic book titles, including aCaptain Marvel six-part miniseries.
He later moved toDC Comics, where he continued penciling more work for titles such asGen13,Birds of Prey,Supergirl (vol. 3), andSuperman (vol. 2). In 2006 Benes was assigned to provide art to for writerBrad Meltzer's run onJustice League of America series,[2] which he drew until 2009. He subsequently contributed toBatman andBirds of Prey (vol. 2) titles, andSteel.
In 2018, Benes released the first comic he also wrote along with penciling,Nina & Ariel. Financed throughcrowdfunding, the title takes anadult comics approach inspired byFire and Ice, where two female warriors try to survive in a post-apocalyptic world.[3][4]
Ed Benes began the Ed Benes Studio for aspiring comic book artists, which currently offers several courses on illustration and techniques in sequential storytelling, and hosts lectures and workshops.[5]

After the success ofIdentity Crisis, best-selling novelist Brad Meltzer was given the job of relaunching the Justice League of America in the title's second series. With Ed Benes providing the pencils, Meltzer stripped the Justice League back to basics.
{{cite book}}:|first2= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)| Preceded by | Supergirl artist 2002–2003 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by Casey Jones | Birds of Prey artist 2003–2005 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Superman artist 2005–2006 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by none | Justice League of America artist 2006–2009 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by Claude St. Aubin | Birds of Prey artist 2010 | Succeeded by |