Showing posts with label Heritage Auctions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heritage Auctions. Show all posts

Friday, July 26, 2013

HA Book Review: Weird Tales' Margaret Brundage

by Don Mangus, Heritage Auctions
The Alluring Art of Margaret Brundage
In 1932, Chicago art student Margaret Hedda Johnson hooked up with the politically radical one-time hobo Myron "Slim" Brundage in the bohemian Dil Pickle Club of Chicago, and romantic sparks flew. It was the fiery ignition of the trailblazing career and firebrand activism of an artistic and social iconoclast.

This superb monograph, The Alluring Art of Margaret Brundage: Queen of Pulp Pin-Up Art by Stephen D. Korshak, J. David Spurlock, et al, is packaged as two-books-in-one. The first section of the book is about Brundage's art and the Weird Talessaga. The second section details her colorful personal life and is chock-full of seldom-seen facts, documents, and photos.

Brundage forever changed the look of Fantasy and Horror genres with her sensually taboo, haunting, and show-stopping pastels for the celebrated pulp magazine Weird Tales. An instant mega-hit with readers, for the early years fans were unaware that "M. Brundage" was actually a woman. After the truth was revealed, Brundage was anointed the first female superstar artist of the Pulp Era.

Decades before the contemporary goth-fetish subculture became all the rage, Brundage's titillating tableaux showcased erotically charged, semi-nude and leather-clad women brandishing whips and running hog-wild. Her outré images became many a fan's secret source of seduction and thus a later target of New York Mayor Fiorella La Guardia's newsstand "decency campaign."

Without a doubt, Weird Tales' success was due as much to Brundage's eye-popping pin-up-quality covers as to the Fantasy yarns within — spine-tingling classics by such literary giants as H. P. Lovecraft, Clark Ashton Smith, Robert Bloch, and Conan's legendary creator — Robert E. Howard. WT writers, such as Seabury Quinn often included scenes in their stories that they hoped would appear as fantastic Brundage covers.

As part of her legacy, MB can lay claim to creating the first iconic cover spotlighting Conan.

This "must-have" book features an all-star line-up of essays written by famed Fantasy artist Rowena (A. Morrill), Weird Tales historian Robert Weinberg, "First-Fandom" member and Shasta publisher Melvin Korshak, and Men's Adventure Magazines In Postwar America's George Hagenauer.

This timeless treasure trove presents not only all of Margaret Brundage's Weird Tales and Conan covers — but also her other pulp magazine covers — including Oriental Stories,The Magic Carpet, and Golden Fleece.

Each MB masterwork is showcased to full effect as a lavishly reproduced 9" x 12" full-color page. It's also worth noting that nine of the Weird Tales and one of the Oriental Stories pastels were reproduced directly from surviving original art.

This superb book is sure to be a prized addition to any Fantasy art fan's library.

Source:

http://comics.ha.com/c/newsletter.zx?frame=no&id=4106#collector-e















Thursday, April 18, 2013

From the HA Comics Newsletter: The Ten Best Comic Book Covers of All Time (According Me): Don Mangus

The Amazing Spider-Man #33 (Steve Ditko)
Stan Lee and Steve Ditko's Spider-Man was an oddball superhero — an alienated, gangly teenager, racked by adolescent guilt, angst, and self-doubt. This yarn found him tested to his breaking point — wedged beneath a colossal machine, drowning, even as his beloved Aunt May faced imminent death — in sore need of a rare medical isotope that Spidey will have to snatch back from the clutches of Doctor Octopus. Ditko's masterfully staged sequence — where the wall-crawler digs deep into his last ounce of resolve to hurl off his burden with a superhuman effort — remains the ultimate climactic moment of superhero storytelling.
Captain America Comics #1 (Jack Kirby and Joe Simon)
Few American comic books can claim to have the importance of this 1941 Timely Publications title. Created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, Captain America became the most successful of the many patriotic heroes to arise following the conflict in Europe involving Nazi Germany and the attack on Pearl Harbor by Japan which resulted in World War II. The savvy Joe Simon once explained the inspiration behind this famous cover as follows: "There had never been a truly believable villain in comics. But Adolf was live, hated by more than half the world — I could smell a winner."
Detective Comics #69 (Jerry Robinson)
Bob Kane profited enormously from major big-league contributions by his talented associates. Indeed, Jerry Robinson and Bill Finger developed Batman's greatest arch-nemesis, that Harlequin of Hate — the Joker. Robinson's superior draftsmanship shines ever so brightly in this magical, Mort Meskin-influenced cover design.
Fantastic Four #1 (Jack Kirby)
Marvel comics was going down for the count when Jack Kirby and Stan Lee melded the appealingly monstrous with the anti-heroic, and sparked the Marvel Age of Heroes. The accomplished George Klein was a first-rate inker over both Jack Kirby at Marvel, and at DC, Curt Swan (on Superman). While other Marvel characters later became more popular, Kirby and Lee's FF laid the foundation for the revolution that followed. Some fans have noted striking compositional similarities between the covers of FF #1 and Brave and Bold #28 (the first JLA cover by Mike Sekowsky and Bernard Sachs, 1960) — well, it's hard to go wrong with a towering monster.

The Incredible Hulk #1 (Jack Kirby)
Monsters and heroes — every kid loves them. But what if the line between good and evil was blurred, and the monster was the hero? The Incredible Hulk shares many motifs with other bipolar pop culture "prototypes" such as Robert Louis Stevenson's "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," Boris Karloff's portrayal of the Frankenstein Monster — and the gamma bomb-blast origin of the Incredible Hulk owes more than a little to the API fantasy film, "The Amazing Colossal Man" (1957). Kirby and Ditko's work on Marvel's many pre-hero "monster books" prepared them perfectly for the upcoming Marvel Age.
Marvel Mystery Comics #9 (Bill Everett and Alex Schomburg)
Even in the Golden Age, Timely/Marvel's superstars were half-monster, half-antihero — case in point — those two hellraisers, Namor, the Sub-Mariner and Dr. Phineas Horton's android, the Human Torch. Two opposing elements at war — fire vs. water — as depicted by two giants of Golden Age comic art — Bill Everett and Alex Schomburg — what could be more mythic?
Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD #1 (Jim Steranko)
Magician, escape artist, and graphic designer Jim Steranko reinvigorated the kinesthetic "eyeball kicks" of four-color comics with his outrageous brand of "Zap Art" — a combination of hallucinatory surrealism, eye-popping op art, visual misdirections and puzzles, and existential, film-noir storytelling. Combining such disparate artistic influences as Jack Kirby, Will Eisner, Bernie Krigstein, Richard Powers, Salvador Dali, Wally Wood, and others, Steranko blew comic readers' minds in the late sixties. Nick Fury was transformed from an anachronistic, cigar-chomping ex-Howler into a James Bond-Diabolik-styled, ultra-cool, super-super-sexy Cold Warrior.
Showcase #4 the Flash (Carmine Infantino)
Carmine Infantino's jet-age costume concept was perfect for the Silver Age Flash. It left Jay Garrick's old-fashioned Mercury-inspired uniform behind in its vapor trails. Joe Kubert "gilded the lilly," adding his expressive inks over Infantino's streamlined pencils. Although DC editor Julie Schwartz is celebrated for launching the Silver Age, I hasten to point out that it was super-scribe Robert Kanigher who actually wrote the first few critical scripts and concepts. Few fans realize he also conceived and designed the famous filmstrip cover concept. This project was DC's all-star team pulling together for one rare occasion on one seminal creation.
Showcase #57 (Joe Kubert)
Leave it to controversial DC writer editor Robert Kanigher to create one of the most outrageous concepts to hit the Silver Age war comics scene. A continuing feature spotlighting Hans Von Hammer, Enemy Ace, the autocratic and merciless cold-blooded Hammer of Hell who reigned over the Killer Skies of WWI. Joe Kubert's rimlit cover presents a chilling portrait of this cold-blooded Kanigher creation, who had only a feral wolf as his confederate. This cover showcases the legendary "K-K team" at its finest.
Superman #14 (Fred Ray)
The young Fred Ray was inspired by comic strip artist and illustrator Noel Sickles, and as a result, Ray created the most iconic and beautifully designed image ever of America's first superhero.
 
Don Mangus brings his experience as a published writer and former college-level Design, Drawing, and Painting instructor to his catalog descriptions in Comics and Illustration Art. He is an artist/cartoonist, with both a BFA and a MFA from Southern Methodist University. His articles on comic art have been published in Comic Book Artist, Robin Snyder's the Comics, and The Charlton Spotlight, as well as on numerous comics-related Web sites If you like Don's list, you can drop him an email at DonM@HA.com.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Amazing Spider-Man 121 “The Night Gwen Stacy Died” Original Art Cover Sells For $286,800

From the Bleeding Cool blog

by Mark Seifert

The cover of Amazing Spider-Man #121 has just sold at Heritage Auctions for $286,800.

This 1973 issue by Gerry Conway and Gil Kane, with cover by John Romita Sr. is considered one of the most important comic books of the Bronze Age. As the Heritage Auctions blurb says, “‘This was the end of innocence for comics… it remains one of the most potent stories ever published,’ was Arnold Blumberg’s comment in Comic Book Marketplace.”  Last year, Marvel Studios founder and producer on all the Spider-Man films Avi Arad told Hero Complex, “My favorite cover is “The Night Gwen Stacy Died.” This is a classic story where our hero is doing all the right things, willing to jeopardize himself, and give his life for justice, yet, inevitably, creates a complication and danger to people around him.”

Romita Sr. did (penciled or penciled & inked) approximately 100 Amazing Spider-Man covers in his initial run ranging from #39-169 (1966-1977, though his run on interior art stopped sooner).

By way of comparison, Romita Sr.’s cover for Amazing Spider-Man #49 went for $167,300 in 2011, his Amazing Spider-Man #43 cover sold for $101,700 in 2006, and his cover for Amazing Spider-Man Annual #3 closed at $104,562 in 2012.

The $286,800 sale of this Amazing Spider-Man #121 cover puts it within the top 5 sales of pencil and ink American comic book cover art ever sold publicly.

The highest price ever paid for an American comic book cover is the $675,250 sale of the Todd McFarlane cover of Amazing Spider-Man #328 in 2012.






Don's blog note: That's right. Yours truly, the dandy Dondaroo, penned the peerless Heritage Auction blurb mentioned above:

John Romita Sr. Amazing Spider-Man #121 "The Night Gwen Stacy Died" Cover Original Art (Marvel, 1973).

Some say the death of Gwen Stacy marked the end of the Silver Age of comics. "This was the end of innocence for comics... it remains one of the most potent stories ever published," was Arnold Blumberg's comment in Comic Book Marketplace.

The caption at the lower right crystallizes the theme of the most desirable piece of 1970s comic art we've auctioned to date. "Not a trick! Not an imaginary tale -- but the most startling unexpected turning point in this web-slinger's entire life. How can Spider-Man go on after being faced with this almost unbelievable death?"

It's a story that fans still talk about, and the most sense-shattering deathblow in comics. Letters from outraged fans flooded the Marvel offices, and led to another mini-controversy -- did Stan Lee OK this storyline or not?

The loss of Gwen marked nothing less than an end to the carefree fun and offbeat innocence of the Silver Age era. Spider-Man and the Marvel Age of Heroes were never quite so merry after this story.
This dynamic cover spotlights the taut suspense in an almost unbearable manner -- who among the beloved ASM cast would die? Many a fan thought, "Oh, please let it be Norman Osborn." Any Spider-fan who bought this issue off the spinner-rack has this iconic scene seared into his/her comic consciousness. With this scene, John Romita and Gerry Conway marked a tragic milestone for the world-famous Spider-Man saga launched by Steve Ditko and Stan Lee -- and for Marvelites, landmark issue covers just can't get better than this.

The image area of this eye-popping bombshell, showcasing John Romita Sr. at the height of his talent, measures 10" x 15". The art has some overall paper aging, a horizontal crease in the middle (at the level of the top of Spider-Man's head), a tear on the right side, and scattered staining that has little effect on the overwhelming power of the image; otherwise, the art is in Very Good condition. John Romita signed the page at the lower right. It's not just a classic cover -- it's a priceless piece of Bronze Age Marvel lore.




Friday, December 21, 2012

And, Oh Yes, They Will Be Mine -- 15 Vintage Phantom Paperbacks


Read it and weep: the Winner's Curse:

Lee Falk. Group of Fifteen First Printing Mass Market Phantom Paperbacks. Avon Books, 1972-75. Toning and mild rubbing; otherwise,Very Good or better. From the collection of first fan, Jack Cordes.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

The World’s Most Expensive Comic Book Art (And Why Prices Keep Climbing)

by Angela Watercutter, Wired, Underwire, September 5, 2012


Detective Comics #27


His colleagues who dealt in other collectibles had hit the seven-figure mark before — the house has sold dozens of coins for $1 million or better — but this time his comics enterprise was hitting the big time.

“When we joined that million-dollar club with a comic, people took notice,” Sandoval told Wired in a recent interview. “The auction record at the time was just over $300,000. When we had that comic in our catalog, we were promoting it as a potential half-million-dollar item.

Then we go into the live session and it’s like, ‘Did we say half-million? We meant 1 million!’”
That was just the beginning. The 20 most valuable comics ever auctioned off have all been sold since 2010. In the past two years, the astronomical selling prices of “holy grail” books like Action Comics No. 1 and Detective Comics No. 27 — powered at least in part by Hollywood cache — have triggered a boom in the comic book collectors’ market. Buyer interest shows no signs of slowing for first editions and other high-profile comics from long ago.

“With comic books, it’s partly a function of just a couple books that went on the market and went for sensational prices and that prompted other people who were just sort of holding on to these with no real motivation to sell to say, ‘Well if that one sold for that amount, then I guess I’m ready to sell mine after all,’” Sandoval said. “That was really the major factor.”

That and pure nostalgia. As the decades pass, new generations of people who grew up reading and loving comics reach a point where they want to revisit something they enjoyed when they were young, and finally possess the means to acquire it, said Michael Zapcic. A sort of living comic book encyclopedia who appears on AMC show Comic Book Men, Zapcic helps run Kevin Smith’s store Jay and Silent Bob’s Secret Stash, where he evaluates prized possessions that customers are trying to unload.

“Everyone hears about grandma, or their mother, throwing away their comic book collection from when they were a kid — I think that’s what drives prices up a little bit as well,” Zapcic told Wired. “People when they get to a certain age want to buy back pieces of their childhood, and that’s what keeps us in business — that and people who never outgrew the love of comic books.”

Nostalgia is one thing, but dropping more than $2 million on a copy of Action Comics #1 — which contains the first appearance of Superman and holds the current record, according to GPAnalysis, which tracks comics auctions and sales — is another. So it’s hard not to wonder if the prices will eventually flat-line or taper off. Both Zapcic and Sandoval seem to think the prices will at least maintain current levels.
Their reasoning sounds hard to believe until they explain why. It’s estimated that fewer than 100 copies of Action Comics No. 1 exist, Zapcic said, and only a few of those are in the kind of excellent condition that brings in multimillion-dollar bids. (The copy that sold for $2,161,000 in 2011 was graded 9.0 by the Certified Guaranty Company, the third-party institution that determines the overall quality of a given comic book.) Likewise, few copies of 1939′s Detective Comics #27, which contains the first appearance of Batman, are expected to surface.

When it comes to original artwork used for covers or inside panels, many of the creators of such historic comics — heavyweights like Bob Kane, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster — have passed away, making their contributions to the classic books part of comics’ enduring legacy.
“In a way, these are almost like Rembrandts or Picassos,” Zapcic said. “Because these are the last 100 that you’ll ever see of these, I don’t think the price will ever really go down. However, I don’t know how much [higher the prices] could go.”

In fact, comic book artists’ original panels are starting to bring in the same big bucks as the comics themselves: In May of last year, an original Frank Miller splash page from The Dark Knight Returns got an astounding $448,125 at auction. Then the sale was quickly surpassed when a piece of Todd McFarlane art from The Amazing Spider-Man No. 328 went for $657,250.

Those kinds of auctions have led to a big jump in the value of original art. “It’s not uncommon for us, at all, to sell a piece for $30,000 that somebody bought for 30 bucks in 1980,” Sandoval said. The numbers are obviously getting attention: Miller himself put some of his work up for auction earlier this year.

As comic book properties continue to be turned into major movie franchises, it only seems natural that the value of the source material will remain high, though Zapcic and Sandoval differ on what impact summer blockbusters have on prices. Movies might have a big impact on lesser-valued books, but not a huge effect on top-shelf collectibles. Sandoval said that although the Iron Man movies caused an uptick in the values of 1963′s Tales of Suspense No. 39, in which the superhero first appeared (a copy recently sold for $262,900), and in 1968′s The Invincible Iron Man No. 1, “none of the other superhero movies have had the same effect.”

For more moderately priced books, the movies can make a difference. For example, The Invincible Iron Man #55 — a 1973 comic that features the first appearance of Thanos, a Marvel Comics villain that showed up in The Avengers — was a “speculative book” that might have gone for $40 before Joss Whedon’s superhero movie landed in theaters, Zapcic said.
After The Avengers became a smash hit, the comic’s price soared. “I think the last time I checked, it was $275,” Zapcic said.

There’s another factor likely to drive prices higher: With the advent of electronic versions of comics, Zapcic suspects physical print runs will decrease, leading to a whole new reason for scarcity. And Sandoval notes that as comics artists move to creating electronically, there won’t be as many original panels to go around, either.

“Ten years from now, people are going to be clamoring,” Zapcic said, but “as long as there is civilization, there are going to be collectors.”

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Steve Borok and Todd Hignite


Here are just two of the Consignment Directors that bring in the original comic art that I catalog every day at Heritage Auctions. Steve Borok holds Todd McFarlane's iconic Spider-Man #1 cover while Todd Hignite holds Jim Lee's Wolverine #27 cover.