Michael Sekowsky was an American comics artist born on November 19, 1923, who built one of the most prolific careers in mid-century DC Comics. He died on March 30, 1989.
Sekowsky broke into the industry in 1942 and over the following decades demonstrated remarkable range across genres — superhero, romance, and beyond — racking up credits on nearly 800 issues. Titles as varied as Secret Hearts, Girls' Romances, Batman, and Four Color appear throughout his bibliography, reflecting both his versatility and his workhorse output.
He is best remembered as the primary penciler on Justice League of America through most of the 1960s, where his ability to stage large ensemble casts — convincingly choreographing a dozen or more heroes in a single scene — made him the visual architect of DC's flagship team book during its formative years.
Equally significant was his later run on Wonder Woman in the late 1960s and early 1970s, where he served as both writer and artist, steering the character through a controversial reinvention that stripped her of her powers and reimagined her as a martial-arts-trained adventurer in contemporary settings. The approach sparked debate but demonstrated Sekowsky's genuine storytelling ambition beyond pure draftsmanship.
His career spanned four decades, leaving a deep imprint on the superhero genre at one of its most commercially vital periods.