>>150848713
Here's a good example of the kind of art that emerges when the artist and writer are separate.
The writer here has written a sad story about Aunt May from Spider-man, but the artist does not care about these characters the same way, he is just a hired gun, he is incapable of rendering the faces with any life in them because he is not also the writer. The best he can hope to achieve is to make a vaguely sad face in a mirror and copy that into his art.
This is not interesting to look at, and the writing is rendered uninteresting also as a result.
It is essentially bad acting. When an actor wishes to give a good performance, he studies deeply the character he is to become. The best actors go to extreme lengths, method acting, to achieve this unity with the director's vision. But comic artists cannot do this, it's just not economical, the only way to achieve this level of quality, is for the artist to already be deeply interested and familiar with the writers story, or to simply be the writer himself.