Marvel Studios Director of Visual Development Andy Park has confirmed that he was among those laid off last week in a sweeping cut at Marvel Studio’s visual development department:
Marvel Studios Visual Development: 2010–2026
It’s the end of an era. I was there at the beginning of a unique team that broke the mold of Hollywood and helped a studio gross over $30 billion.I’ve been here for over 16 years, spanning over 40 films and shows, 15 of which I led as Director of Visual Development/Visual Development Supervisor. I got to lead, work with, and hire the best artists in the entertainment business. It has been the honor of a lifetime to be part of the team that helped create the visual language of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. I couldn’t be prouder to have been part of the entire history of this department.As I wrap up my final months here, I’m looking forward to the creative freedom of a fresh start. I’m eager to bring my perspective and leadership to new challenges. To those I’ve worked with before, and those I’ve yet to meet: I’m looking forward to the conversations ahead.
Andy Park
“It has been the honor of a lifetime to be part of the team that helped create the visual language of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.”
What an understatement. Park led the team that created the look of the most successful movie franchise in history, that set the bar for film for over a decade, and that changed the landscape of Hollywood and (truly) the comic book industry forever.
Prior to being hired by Marvel, Park was a comics artist and a friendly face hanging out in artist alley. The replies on all his socials are yet another tribute to a fantastically creative artist who changed the way we view the world.
Park is not the only Marvel VizDev magician who made their departure known on social media. Wesley Burt, another fantastically talented artist whose work on the Fantastic Four concept art was among the most exciting material for the project, tweeted something that might stand as the ultimate symbol of shareholder over content creator:
the irony of having a one-on-one HR layoff meeting in the conference room with my Loki mural on it https://t.co/94sLrfojOj pic.twitter.com/llKhz5pO61
— Wesley Burt (@wesburt) April 15, 2026
While it’s normal for companies to look at who has the highest pay when making layoffs, getting rid of the artists who created the look that the world fell in love with while executive compensation is at an all time high seems pretty damn ironic, right? What’s the point in owning shares in a company that doesn’t have any people to turn out valuable product?
Maybe even the landed gentry class is beginning to catch on to this. Jason Calacanis, himself a pretty entitled tech type, was still smart enough to spot an opportunity:
if a group of these laid-off @MarvelStudios folks have an idea for a startup, I’m all ears… jason AT calacanis DOT com (for life).
I gotta think @andyparkart and all these elite artists could create the next generation of characters and create unlimited upside… I’ve always… https://t.co/uuvNMf6sXP
— @jason (@Jason) April 20, 2026
“if a group of these laid-off @MarvelStudios folks have an idea for a startup, I’m all ears… jason AT calacanis DOT com (for life),” Calacanis wrote. “I gotta think @andyparkart and all these elite artists could create the next generation of characters and create unlimited upside… I’ve always wanted to create a studio!”
The supposition around Hollywood is that Disney hopes to replace their human concept artists with Ai art models – which will of course lead to further enshittification, via homogenization and robot inability to perceive intangibles the way humans can.
While being perceptive enough to realize that humans make art that makes money isn’t exactly a huge leap of insight, at least its a nod in the right direction. Otherwise we’re in for a future of fighting fruit heads forever.












I wonder if they need any talented people over at DC Studios?