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Comic Art Factory

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Posts posted by Comic Art Factory

  1. Without a doubt one of the most memorable, influential and acclaimed graphic novels of all time, Will Eisner’s « A Contract With God » is beloved by fellow artists and readers alike. Arguably the first modern graphic novel, it revolutionized the comics world when it was first published in 1978.

    This selection of pages (tight pencilled prelims and inked pages) had never been neither exhibited nor offered for sale

    The exhibition will take place from the 15th until the 31th of October at the Comic Art Factory gallery, based in Brussels, Belgium. Over 60 pieces will be available for sale at the gallery and through the website : https://www.comicartfactory.com/en/

    Subscribe to our newsletter to know about the art drop.

    Here is the teaser trailer

     

     

  2. First comic art show for Irish artist Keith Burns

    The Comic Art Factory gallery (based in Belgium) is proud to announce our newest exhibition : "Out of the blue" (25 October - 9 November). 

    Published by Aftershock, this series is the third Wold war 2 aviation story written by Garth Ennis (Preacher, The Boys, Hellblazer,..) and pencilled by Keith Burns. 

    Check those spectacular dogfights ! New art will be online Friday the 27th of October at 9 AM Pacific time. But you can already have a look at the art from both previous series

     

     

     

  3. 3 minutes ago, Will_K said:

    It looks like @artdealer actually has printed descriptions/prices on the art.  So... yay. 

    Sorry but I think it's the minimum required when selling art. And you can at least take the time to write down artist, series, issue number, any conditions issues worth mentioning. That's your job as a dealer. As it is to be able to send PDF invoices.   

  4. 4 minutes ago, Bronty said:

    I don’t buy that.   

    At the end of the day if you’ve got the art someone wants nobody cares about post it vs printed.

    if it’s the comic they read when they were 11 or that their bad brought them home from 7-11 or whatever, none of that matters.

    if it’s a piece you really enjoy by an artist you like, none of that matters.   It does look funny when you’re window shopping for pieces you aren’t going to buy anyways, but that’s not their customer. 

    Oh come on, are you really summarizing it as post-it VS printed ? Have you ever seen anyone selling anything with post it as price tags ? One of the last show I waent to, half of the sellers didn't have prices on their art, and one of them had to think each time as he only had a price list of the prices he paid for these pieces. and on the same day, he gave me different asking prices on some pieces. And he's been selling art for more than 20 years. Sorry but I can't stand that personnally. and I really hope that in a few years time, these shenanigans will not exist anymore. And yes, I know many people that this absence of clear pricing make them reluctant to start a comic art collection. 

  5. The Marvel team-up #84 cover was 12 K 5 years ago, now 22.5 K. More than absurd. The Brothers did it again. 

    And I still don't understand how "art dealers" can dare to offer pieces with no prices shown or barely drawn on post-it papers, Just seems like we're at the flea market, hesitating between a 3$ book and a 5$ one, but no w'ere talking dozens of thousands of dollars pieces and they can't manage to print stickers, really ?. This shady part of the comic art business makes it impossible for many potential new customers to come aboard.