• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

Andahaion

Member
  • Posts

    527
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Andahaion

  1. Ultimately it's up to you, and your point about talking it through/aloud is well taken.  When faced with situations, I try to find something which puts it into context.  What I thought of reading your post was that people buy new cars all the time.  Two years in and, what, half the "value" is gone?  And it just snowballs from there.  Yet, we have to buy a new car.  Why?  It's borderline insane to me.  This might make sense, or not.  It's just what popped into my head.  And, I presume most here keep art longer than they would a car.  Then again, lots of people on this board move a lot of art.  I buy to keep, so I'm not too worried (up to a certain price point) about retaining value. 

    And interestingly enough, I'm also considering a piece that is giving me fits trying to ascertain it's long term potential.  I don't mind spending money, but at a certain point (which is unique to each individual) the money means something.  

  2. I might be incorrect here, but if you accepted payment via friends and family doesn't that negate some seller protection?  Not that you'd be protected if the buyer decided to "return" the piece and send you a photocopy of the art.  The empty galleries are a red flag, but I suppose you have to decide what your risk tolerance level is, and at what price point.

  3. 11 hours ago, Jay Olie Espy said:

    I knew by your collecting focus that we were the same age—only a month apart actually. You paint some really nice work. What are doing collecting ugly comic art??? (That’s me trying to lessen the competitive field.) :nyah:

    Ha.  It's funny, I have an internal struggle concerning what to do about comic art.  I only have four pieces, two of which I'd qualify as "adult purchases" (meaning I spent a few K on each one).  I don't have "nostalgia" for any of the four pieces.  The closest is the splash from Batman RIP, but I was nearly 30 when that came out so I don't think that counts.  I just really like the story and the art.  I didn't even read the story of the Frison Wonder Woman cover I bought.  I do have a "hit list" of artists I do want and it spans the gamut...Kirby, Colan, Mazzucchelli, Lee, Jock, Miller, Aparo, N. Adams, Cassaday, Tedesco, and Coipel just to name a few off the top of my head.  Oh, and I still want something from Felix's website but I darn near miss every art drop due to my work schedule.  But, my first love is collecting fine art and so I don't think I'll ever amass a large collection of comic OA.  So, hopefully that means I'm not really any competition :)

  4. 1 minute ago, the blob said:

    Does anyone know if these covers computer generated? or largely computer generated and the artist comes in and does some touch up?

     

    I assume Ross does a lot of projections and photo references and such, but they're all painted by hand as he has been doing for decades?

    The cover I own (posted above) is produced in several stages.  She does a simple line drawing in pencil, then scans and prints that onto a new bristol board.  She then does the grayscale you see in the picture by hand using graphite, chalk, acrylic.  She then scans that and finishes the color digitally.  Here is a pic of the finished cover:

     

    Related image

  5. Jenny Frison has stated that when asked to do a cover she is very rarely relayed any information about the story.  Not sure this is a good or bad thing, but I think helps add some context about the real world issues and may offer insight as to why these types of covers do not usually have anything to do with the story.  I really like her work. I also like the covers of yesteryear.  Good art is good art, and comes in many forms. 

    WW #54 Cover.jpg

  6. On 1/28/2019 at 4:54 PM, vodou said:

    Yes, to clarify representatives carry art on consignment for a fee (one way or another)...which can get sticky when people disappear with the art or the rep's in major financial trouble and the creditors (and courts) are viewing the consignments as "inventory". It happens too much, bad stories, in fine art.

    Laws Governing Art Consignment

    Nothing revelatory there.  In the context of Comix4fun's post it sounded like there was something significant to learn.  In any rate, most of these guys are "reps" for a subset of artists, but also "deal" in other artists' art.  So then what is Artists' Choice...?  Both?  Romitaman seems to be one who is strictly a dealer.  I still don't understand why an artist would sign on with a rep and be ok with that rep not having an understanding of how they work and have boilerplate language they can throw at guys like me.  I'm sure there are exceptions for reasons hitherto unknown, but on the whole it doesn't make much sense to me if I'm trusting someone to "represent" my work.  This is an unnecessary barrier to sales.  Sounds like most customers just don't ask much aside from "is page X available"?

  7. 21 minutes ago, vodou said:

    You're going to get into this at times when the dealer doesn't actually have the art in hand but merely on consignment from the artist. Not every dealer (really REP btw) wants to admit and own that aspect, it reveals that they may/do have almost no actual monetary investment in their business and maybe that's not the look they want to give. (I don't think there is anything wrong with that but it should be so stated, being upfront and level setting expectations is always great customer service!) So asking detailed questions about a piece (the size, is it 'clean', etc) will be brushed off or delayed response while they're trying to get the artist to give that info to them...it's kind of funny, but anyway...I think that's the case with Cadence and that's also why the delay in shipping, they probably have to get the art in hand before they can re-label it out to you! None of which is excusable (imo) without prior notice. I mean...just admit th art isn't in hand and that can/will add more days than customers may normally anticipate. Right?

    Couldn't agree more.  No communication looks and feels (especially for the person spending $$$$) terrible.  But I still don't understand how a person who literally deals a particular artist's work...is supposed to champion it and produce sales...cannot speak to it...?  How does that happen?  Has he never actually seen the art in hand?  Is that a thing?  Does the artist know her rep acts like this to potential clients/customers?  Now I'm all worked up...it's almost happy hour time...