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Sideshow Bob

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Everything posted by Sideshow Bob

  1. Hard pressed to believe this is a Mike Grell illustration... I'm looking specifically at, say, the signature. Or the art. If you're looking at the inking on the arm as your Mike Grell signature, that's just texture on the arm. Find out who wrote the APR under the arm. Mike's signature would look more like this:
  2. The frozen hat in midair in the foreground is a nice touch. Plus, living in NYC, seeing a well-drawn rooftop water tank warms my cold heart.
  3. I have a "sold but not forgotten" folder that is not public. When I sell a piece, I move it to that directory. In the couple instances where I have re-acquired a piece, I just move it back to the active directory.
  4. I loved that Ten Nights of the Beast mini-series, and remember being blown away by Zeck's cover work. Its firmly in the peak nostalgia zone for me, and I was only a DC-only kid back then so Batman (and Aparo) were IT for me. I like the idea of a first appearance, and in particular this page with KGBeast; the first in-costume page is a couple pages later in the same issue. So I paid up (sorry, underbidder), and the bidding history reflects there were just two of us over $800. It only takes two fools... For the Aparo side of it, you definitely have some pent up Aparo demand from people like me who are hungry for the Batman pages that might surface from that run, but also those Spectre fans that love the Adventure series (myself included). I don't think that Aparo hunger is going to go away with this or the next couple auctions, but if its a deluge of Aparo at every auction at HA and CL, then (like everything in this hobby) the cream will rise and you'll see middling results for the generic pages. And I passed on the Newton Deadshot page...there was an oddly drawn leg/arm in the top panel that I just couldn't get past, even though I have the preceding page from that issue. Its a great fight scene regardless, and worthy of the $1200 price tag.
  5. Haha. That KGBeast was my too pricey buy. It goes into my collection alongside a Zeck cover recreation on #420, and two other production covers from Ten Nights. Excited to see it pop up. Bob
  6. Without trimming any fat, it is an impressive and focused collection creating a greatest hits OA list of the modern-era Batman (Tim Sale/Greg Capullo/Jim Lee/Jock/SGM). Drool-worthy.
  7. Courtesy of Google Translate, which I hope gets the gist of it: "I did not know anything about Master Race myself, whereas I've been a fan of short comics and short stories since I was a teenager, and I had discovered the exact copies by chance over a year ago. the Paris exhibition "Shoah and comics" at the Holocaust Memorial. Absolute love for this story and the way it is told! The specifications of this kind of publication implies an effective twist and there I was trapped as a beginner! The specialists and the media will mainly remember the historical interest of the subject of the story told, but it is reductive. If we love comics, this story is magical and the opportunity to acquire it was unexpected in the context of my future activities."
  8. Picked up the first one. It’s stunning! Thought about going for the rest, but was content at that point. I remember selling my mini-series in 1991 to help pay for a limo to prom, so to say this is peak nostalgia is an understatement!
  9. Yeah, I thought they were strong too; between taxes, risk-taking and education, he hits on some universal appeal but some of the pieces from a year or so ago were superb in comparison. A Rarebit Fiend at $19,200 was another firm performance for Little Nemo's younger brother.
  10. I might. There are two Black & White statues where I also have the art, and that is pretty cool to put side-by-side. I don't collect Risso's art, or I'd be telling others to back off right now!!! GLTA!
  11. Batman and Spectre commission, by Patric Reynolds. Lots of great communication during the process, including multiple thumbnail layouts. -Bob [Note: Randy Bowen sculpture used as reference on the Batman.] https://www.comicartfans.com/gallerypiece.asp?piece=1506578
  12. Thanks Malvin. I appreciate you giving me the green light to discuss this on the boards, and as well for the extra info. Its starting to look more like it was sourced in the US as part of the initial production process, given the date stamp on the back. I'm definitely leaning toward the text within the oval having been corrected on the fly, probably with another stat. Maybe the stat that fixes the "In" is sitting on the acetate overlay with the rogues. I'll add a picture of the date stamp and see if anyone can place it as standard DC protocol in 1982.
  13. Posing this to a wider audience than my CAF page. I picked up a stat cover to Detective #526 (published May 1983) in the recent ComicLink auction. Not a huge deal since its a stat, but I really like that issue and to me its Don Newton's magnum opus. Anyway, the description was that it was likely used in a UK reprint. I accepted that at face value (again, its a stat), but when I got it home, it got more complicated. The concern I have is that the stat cover says "Batman's 500th Appearance" with some white-out on the edges of those words. Each of the words in that oval are pasted on. The published cover, however, appears with "Batman's 500th Appearance In", counting from Detective #27. The "In" appears on the US, US/Canada, and Canadian covers without fail, but for some reason, it is missing on this particular piece. With the "In" included, the B in Batman is flush up against the oval border; in this one, it has got plenty of room. In some ways, it almost like the initial design excluded the "In" as the spacing works with the font size, and then someone re-did it after once they realized it wasn't Batman's 500th appearance per se, but the 500th in Detective Comics. I lean towards this being the US stat that had the oval later fixed, and I say that because the ears on Batgirl are a stat on a stat here, and they are perfectly placed when compared to the printed copy. That's is a bit difficult to pull off perfectly for a reproduction (not impossible though), but it still leaves me with plenty of doubts. Helping this is the back, which has a circular stamp that says "DC IVT'Y __/__/8_" and handwritten in that is "12/29/82". Assuming that is real, that stamp and date predates the publication date and seems to work with my perceived timeline. Three other small points: I have never seen the original art for this cover (anyone?), the faces of the rogue's gallery were likely a negative overlay so that is consistent, and the "Anniversary" stat was used in other issues so I will also rate that as consistent.So, what do I have? Some stats on a period piece of DC stock paper with a back stamp (i.e. a forgery)? An early production mistake that was later corrected? A foreign reprint cover? Definitely not sure. If you know of a reproduction of this cover that drops the "In", do please let know! Or if you have any ideas, let me know or drop it in the comments. After writing all this, this seems like a lot of detective work for a stat cover... Bob As a plug, if I ever find the DPS from this issue (incidentally, the title page art also says "In"), it would make my year! If you know where that DPS is, I will make it worth your while for any productive info!!!!! Here is the CAF zoom-in option: https://www.comicartfans.com/gallerypiece.asp?piece=1505057
  14. Yurgo, do you remember who had the Bruce Timm pages? Thanks! Bob
  15. That splash landed with me. With the "death of Shane" page, I am very happy with gathering these two prime Tony Moore pages from WD. I still read the book, and enjoy it, and could care less what happens on the TV show.
  16. As always, if you know the OA market specific to the pieces you're interested in, you won't be deceived by shill bids. But on the surface, that is a bit shady.
  17. Its well paced. And some pretty cool stuff. I picked up the Zeck Batman pinup at the reserve on an absentee bid, but the early Flash page had only three bids come through to GBP 42,500. That didn't make the low end of the GBP 45k estimate, and there was some mumbling so I couldn't tell if it sold or if it passed. But an Evil Dead II clapperboard from 1986 had an estimate of GBP600 and went for GBP 6k...wow. Lots of other great props and costumes. Entertaining and a well run auction.
  18. There was an auction a couple years ago for the complete interiors of Batman #227, at Doyle's of all places. The pages started getting broken up last year. I expect the seller is going to do better with the individual pages than he would selling the book as a total. Even though its a Bats book, the attraction there is on the Adams cover, not the inside which is somewhat ho-hum.
  19. I was able to pick up the My Little Pony covers that I had sold as part of a package deal a year ago; got them back for a LOT less. My daughters were unhappy to say the least when I pulled them off the wall. Will be interesting to see the reaction when I bring them back out. 50/50 it's either tears of joy or "it's been a year, and we so much mature now that we're 8 and 10 and ponies are for babies and where's my iPad?".
  20. I don't recall ever seeing Batman having the suit underneath and stripping down like Superman on the street. With the cowl, I suppose that would normally be impractical. Neat page...
  21. Put a couple of my favorite OA pieces into the ComicLink auction ending on Tuesday: 1) Title Splash page (Don Newton) in Batman #337 for Robin backstory. http://www.comiclink.com/Auctions/item.asp?back=%2FComicTrack%2FAuctions%2Fauctions_first.asp&id=1269923 2) American Gods #1 cover (Glen Fabry). Very finished pencils, and coloring was digital, so this is the only OA for #1's cover. http://www.comiclink.com/Auctions/item.asp?back=%2FComicTrack%2FAuctions%2Fauctions_first.asp&id=1269925 3) David Petersen's My Snowy Valentine double-page spread. From his beautifully illustrated children's book, with super detailed house drawing. http://www.comiclink.com/Auctions/item.asp?back=%2FComicTrack%2FAuctions%2Fauctions_first.asp&id=1269926 4) The Wake #5 splash (Sean Murphy). The big merman leads the attack! http://www.comiclink.com/Auctions/item.asp?back=%2FComicTrack%2FAuctions%2Fauctions_first.asp&id=1269922 5) Rachel Rising #17 cover (Terry Moore). http://www.comiclink.com/Auctions/item.asp?back=%2FComicTrack%2FAuctions%2Fauctions_first.asp&id=1269924