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M**K
But where's the DC art?
Before I talk about this book here, I'd like to get an observation about Amazon's packaging off my chest. In a word, it's inadequate. My copy was merely inserted with another item in a box too large without buffering materials to thwart sliding or additional cardboard, resulting in cover scratching and bumped corners. This experience has caused me to reconsider whether I want to buy books from Amazon in the future, even at discount."Grailpages" itself is something I've waited a long time to see, a work devoted to a hobby and pastime that's near and dear to my heart, and apparently to those of lots of other people. I found myself reluctant to put this book down and much of it engrossing, in spite of a couple of problems. For one thing, author Payne has an annoying habit of referring to examples of comic book pages in the copy that aren't available for convenient viewing relative to the descriptions. This happens quite a bit, and becomes frustrating.The writer, himself a collector of original comic book art and a dealer, has interviewed many of the names and personalities I've seen displayed for years on sites like Comicart-L, The Lowry Gallery, and Comicartfans, and shares brief biographies and insights into their collections and thoughts on the hobby. These are the best parts of the text, entertaining and richly threaded with personal anecdotes that shed light on how so many collectors can afford the astronomical costs of these pursuits (and often can't). These are interspersed with the author's observations about collectors and the merits of a couple of the artists whose work is sought avidly and hoarded, sometimes for amounts as high as five figures or more. Unfortunately, some of the wording gets a little stuffy for the subject matter (we ARE, for pity's sake, talking about comic art), with some of the prose so densely overwritten as to be almost impenetrable.Curiously, emphasis runs high and hot and heavy on Marvel art, but DC's is reduced to a virtual footnote, which makes no sense at all and is more than a little strange in historical context. Could Payne find NO DC collectors to interview? The lapse is compounded when a chapter waxes eloquently and gushes over a chosen few independent creators (Los Bros. Hernandez and Dave Sim, basically), but nobody else. Maybe DC collectors and those of other artists are being saved for a sequel? One hopes so.
J**R
Five Stars
A verry interesend book about comics art colletibles.
H**T
Collecting Marvel.
142 Marvel originals are shown.20 from DC.3 EC comics.And except 3 from Jaime and Gilbert Hernandez and 1 from Dave Sim, no artists from independant publishers.Mainly Marvel of the '60s to late '70s. Same with interviews of the artists.Which is understandable. A) Most of the collectors interviewed belong to a generation who started to read and collect comics at that time. B) The publisher itself (and his readers) are mainly focused on this period.The text is interesting mixing interviews of artists, collectors, writers, and techniques. But when the author tries to see hidden meanings in some art he's just ridiculous (i.e his explanations of the cover of Amazing Spider-Man #68 as a metaphoric image of capitalism against proletariat).Speaking of capitalism, everybody talk a lot about price and how they make money, and sell and buy this and that and how much it costs now and then.The most desappointing point is the quality of repros.Don't expect to see inside the beautiful quality of scans on the cover. The level of quality is just the same as an Essential Marvel. That means an ordinary B&W printing on a cheap paper.As a result, you can't really see the work of inkers, letterer or penciller or read the indications of artists or corrections. All the details which make the price of an artist edition book. But we can't demand more for $16.
P**L
Should have been titled "Collecting the Art of John Romita Sr. and John Buscema"
I will recommend this book through gritted teeth, because it does reproduce a lot of attractive original art, and we can't have too many books of this kind.I do wish that a better and slicker grade of paper had been used, but TwoMorrows obviously opted for mid-quality paper in order to keep the price down. I'd have paid another $10 for better paper, but they presumably know their market.However, the selection bias in favour of Marvel -- and the two above-named artists in particular - is little short of scandalous.My quick page count showed that of the 32 full-page reproductions scattered throughout the book, 28 were of Marvel pages, 3 DC, 1 Fantagraphics (detail of a Jaime Hernandez cover), and ZERO from other publishers.\Counting both full-page and smaller reproductions, I found 29 pieces by John Buscema and 27 by John Romita, Sr. -- both wonderful illustrators, but grossly overrepresented. (Kirby, Byrne and Colan appear to account for about a dozen each). But NO Alex Toth, almost no Ditko or Wood, no Kubert, no Infantino, no Williamson, no Frazetta (!!), no Kurtzman, no Krigstein, no Jack Cole, no Lee Elias, in fact almost no Golden Age art at all, and very little before 1967 -- basically, the first, formative 30 years of comic book art dumped down the memory hole. No romance, Western, funny animal, teen, crime, nothing from MAD or Classics Illustrated or Archie or Little Lulu. Robert Crumb? Forget it. But LOTS of Spider-Man and Conan.I haven't read the text yet, but skimming through it I can understand what another reviewer meant about 'navel-gazing' ("Though he doesn't consider himself a collector in the technical sense, Steve does harbor original art..."). And there are some embarrassing fanboy passages. ("Many reverse sides of John Buscema's works display sketches that border on complex art, like some version of a Kandinsky". Kandinsky? Please.).One can only hope that TwoMorrows or other publishers will do more justice to the diversity of great comic book art in books to come. In the meantime, we have Heritage's comic art auction catalogues.
W**E
Ideal para coleccionistas de Comics
Es un libro que quiza peque de ser demasiado corto pero qie muestra el mundo del coleccionismo del arte original desde la perspectiva de varios reputados coleccionistas que proporcionan información y anecdotas varias acerca de esta afición que es todo un mundo.
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