Manny88 Posted January 26, 2020 Share Posted January 26, 2020 Found some original King Conan splash art. All are stamped with the marvel copyright stamp, years 83/82. Each one is signed on the back by the individual inker - Marcos, Voss, Sonntag. 3 pages are from issue #20 and one is from issue #15. Randomly came across these and was wondering if they hold any significant value. Would really appreciate any information I can get. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
grapeape Posted January 27, 2020 Share Posted January 27, 2020 Marc Silversti is the penciler. A ton of inkers worked on # 20. Marcos the inker is Judith, not Pablo. #20 is an issue where Conan finds out his son is dead. The stories had nice emotional bonds between father and son. #15 was unremarkable. probably a few $100 each page. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Varanis Posted January 27, 2020 Share Posted January 27, 2020 My dad bought a couple issue #20 Silvestri / Judith Marcos pages from Pablo Marcos for $150 / each relatively recently. Comps online seemed to be $300 - $500. So value is probably $200 - $400. Maybe some future upside since this is early Silvestri Marvel work. grapeape and zhamlau 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chaykin Stevens Posted January 27, 2020 Share Posted January 27, 2020 (edited) "Voss" is probably actually Charles Vess, which may make that page a little more valuable to some people. Sonntag is Ned Sonntag, who seems to have worked mainly on undergound and humour titles. King Conan #15 was inked by Ricardo Villamonte and Jon D'Agostino. None of the pages is a splash. Edited January 27, 2020 by Chaykin Stevens Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
alxjhnsn Posted January 28, 2020 Share Posted January 28, 2020 (edited) Standard reply on how to price comic art is in the spoiler tags to preserve the sanity of those that have seen this too often. Comments on how to improve the write-up are gratefully received. Spoiler You might want to explore the following resources The website Comic Art Tracker can help you find art and look at current asking prices for similar pieces. The OA auction archive at Heritage Auctions – This archive presents the results from all of their OA auctions.. Once you sign-up and get an id, you can search for pieces by your artist and see what they have sold for. The CAF Market Data - More auction results (more than 1,000,000) are available if you join the Comic Art Fans site, pay for Market Data access, and access eBay and other auction sites as well as Heritage. The Comic Art Database. It contains transaction records entered by the owners of Comic OA. Dealer sites. Dealers, generally, post their art with fixed prices though there are exceptions. There is a list of dealers on CGC OA board and the Dragonberry site has a list as well. The CAF site will search the inventories of several dealers for you. [Of course, Comic Art Tracker is better.] Blouin Art Info which tracks sales at major art auctions. It can turn up some Comic OA as well. Look for the “Art Prices” item on the top right of the screen Jerry Weist's Comic Art Price Guide - Heritage published a third edition of it. In my opinion, it's a good history book and might be useful for comparison work, but it was out of date a year before it was printed. A topic on the CGC OA boards, A-level panel page valuations by artist/run - thoughts/additions/changes?, holds a discussion that relates to your question. It provides some "generally agreed upon" ranges for popular runs by popular artists on popular characters. The Biggest OA Prices thread tracked some of the largest sales in the OA space. While that particular thread has stopped; it's probably worth reading for the discussions. Meanwhile , the information is still being updated - just with a different mechanism. The price information moved to The OA Elite blog. Click on the categories on the top of the page to see the updated list. The discussion moved to Biggest OA Prices: The Blog. Dealer quotations are valuable. To get one, you approach a dealer with the art (in person) or image (by email) and ask what they would offer for it. If they make an offer, remember that they need significant margin especially if they feel that the piece will not sell immediately. You might double their offer to reach a retail price. Of course, this is a very hard to manage approach. An excellent list of dealers can be found on Comic Art Tracker here. Check a few and use those that seem to carry art like you are trying to sell - some dealers do specialize. New buyers and sellers often find that OA is too hard to price. I agree that it is difficult. However, I think that there is a valid reason. Each piece is unique. Uniqueness make art sales generally and OA specifically non-linear. Examples of how piece can differ in ways that impact pricing include: Content: Consecutive pages could and do sell for radically different amounts based on their content. Page Layout: In general, you might say: Covers > 1st Page Splash > Other Splash > 1/2 splash > panel page However, that's not always true either. The right panel page can be much more compelling than a bland splash. Penciler vs. character: There are "A-list" artists, but not all of their books/characters have the same value. Kirby FF pages generally go for more than JIM/Thor pages which go for more than Cap pages (2nd run) which go for more than ... Pencilers/inkers combinations - Kirby/Sinnott FF pages rank above Kirby and anyone else on FF, but a Kirby/InkerX FF page might be more or less than a Kirby/Stone Thor page. Hard to tell. Finally, you should join the comic book OA community. The three main points of Internet contact are: Yahoo's comicart-l mailing list The Comic Art Fans website The CGC OA Board The main points of physical contact are probably: Dedicated Comic Art Shows (high dealer attendance) Comic Art Con (Spring/Fall) - A twice yearly show originally in northern NJ, but moving to NYC. The domain seems to have lapsed, but the show owner has a page for it here. NYC Comic Art Expo - Annual spring show, nothing but art people (dealers, individual sellers, and buyers) and a few local artists. Held at the Penn Hotel opposite Penn Station Torpedo Comics Collectors Convention (née LA Comic Art Show) - Annual art show one week before SDCC to leverage the dealer’s visit to the west coast Comic Conventions with High Dealer Attendance San Diego Comic Con (July) New York City Comic Con(October) Shows with a comic artist focus Heroes Comic Con - Not a lot of comic art dealers, but a huge number of artists who generally will draw and have portfolios to sell Baltimore Comic Con - Similar to HeroesCon. One last comment, if you are looking to buy or sell, spend the time to learn the market. That might take 6 months, but it's worth the time. Edited January 28, 2020 by alxjhnsn Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...