Wednesday, November 25, 2009

November 25, 2009 Cerebus 8 pp 2-3 & Jakax2

eBay item no. 190347664642
Cerebus 8 pp 2-3
Buy It Now Price: $1600
number of bids: 0
Seller: zengarden


COMMENT: no surprise here; $800 each for early pages is well above the typical market price


eBay item no. 250358755851
Cerebus 191 p4
But It Now Price: $1195
Seller: Coollinesart
Buyer: unlisted

COMMENT: total surprise here; $1200 for this page is way higher than usual - some wanted THIS page for a reason


eBay item no. 220510301164
Jaka
Seller: tatterjeans42
Buyer: unknown
Price: $411.56

COMMENT: no comment

Sunday, November 22, 2009

November 22, 2009 1 more...

Thanks for the nice on-and off-line messages from y'all on that award.

The last item from the Heritage Auctions:

Buyer: alchemist57
Price: $140

Saturday, November 21, 2009

November 21, 2009 3 out of 4 ain't bad

Let's see. All of these ended in the last 12 hours or so.


3-PART LIVES OF CEREBUS SERIES (#2 of 3, I guess)
WINNER: alchemist57
PRICE: $850



3-PART LIVES OF CEREBUS SERIES (#3 of 3, I guess)
LOSER: alchemist57, who forgot to go in and top up his bid... busy the last few days... meh
PRICE: $805



CEREBUS #68 p 11
WINNER: alchemist57
PRICE: $650



CEREBUS #68 p 12
WINNER: alchemist57
PRICE: $650

Monday, November 16, 2009

November 16, 2009 "And then Gene Day said..."

On topic:



There is a story out there about Gene Day looking at the appendage that Dave was drawing out at the end of an arm, where the question was raised "what is that?" to which Gene says "that's a Dave Sim hand" or, at least, that is a close enough version of the story to encapsulate my reaction to the non-photo referenced drawing of Jaka that is up for auction at the moment. It's not at all a criticism, it's just that our artistic signatures will always show through, like handwriting, no matter what you try to do. That is definitely a Dave Sim hand you are looking at.

Off topic:

Joe, the "Robots and Monsters" guy, really did his homework on those drawings, and I should not assume you can catch the subtle parts.

I put "Spring, China, fireworks" together because the Chinese New Year, or Spring festival, is celebrated with fireworks. Joe called this robot "Yan-wow," which is a delightful almost-homophone of the Chinese word for fireworks ['Yanhua" (smoke and flowers) or "yanhuo" (smoke and fire, or colorful fire when yan is pronounced in a different tone) refers to fireworks].

I put "Summer, Xi'an, Warrior" together because Xi'an is the location of the first Emperor's dynasty, the same fellow who ordered the construction of the Great Wall and the terra cotta warriors. Xi'an is also the start of the Silk Road, and still hosts one of the largest Muslim populations in China, including a great mosque. It is also one of the hottest damned places I have ever visited in China, no matter what time of year. Joe called this guy "Qin" because that was the name of the first Emperor, and it is roughly pronounced "chin" and gives rise to the name of the unified country, "china."

I put "Autumn, Beijing, Moon" together because autumn is the time of year for the moon festival, which I strongly associate with Beijing (and the yummy yummy moon cakes), but for sure it is a country-wide celebration. The robot is in the shape of the CCTV building, a landmark of architecture, and so the name of the robot is "SeeSeeTeeVee."

FInally, I put "Winter, Tibet, Buddhist" together for pretty obvious reasons. The name Joe gave to this robot ("Faxian") is the Chinese name of the historical monk who brought Buddhism to Tibet from India. And the word itself now connotes "wanderer."

Pretty nicely done.

Continuing off topic, just cuz it is my blog and you can bloody well take it or leave it:

At the movies:

"2012" (from the disaster-king who brought us Independence Day and The Day After Tomorrow), 2012 was more than I expected it to be - a stunning tour-de-force of special effects, for sure... just how the beejeezuz do that do that?... gracefully punctuated by little character sketches so you can catch your breath. I rather enjoyed it and did not at all notice that is was long movie... at all.

On TeeVee:

"Smallville" - I am enjoying this show quite a bit this year. I have no history with the DC universe, and the week-to-week narrative hopscotches all over the place, but it is a pretty good live-action super-hero program.

"Heroes" - It's like collecting Cerebus when half the issue was teensy-tiny little print that you cannot read - I still think there is a pony here, but I am not willing to squint in order to follow every little thing that is happening. The show is a real mess.

"V" - I like the way this is starting. In two episodes things are moving along, and the incredible distrust of anyone and everyone around you is palpable. The mystery, in my view, is just what a group of dirty, damned lizards with all of this technology actually needs from earthlings that they have to go through all the trouble of a long-term infiltration (a la Marvel's "Invasion" ... the lizards might as well be skrulls) rather than just conquering us with their big-ass spaceships. I hope there's a pay-off to that one.

"Fringe" - I'm one hour into the pilot episode from last year... so far, it has my interest.

"Lost" - Oh.. dear... LOST... if the spoiler reports are right, and the sneaky-pete on-set photos pretty much confirm those reports, I am guessing that every damned hour of that show is going to be a banquet.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

November 12, 2009 Robots & Monsters 1 of 4

You may or may not recall the super-cool folks at the "Robots and Monsters" project.

http://robotsandmonsters.org

They pick a charity.

They offer you a nice little (6"x6") original color drawing of a robot or a monster, your call, based on a set of three words that you give them. Each drawing costs $50.00. This is not a non-profit organization. $20.00 goes to the charity, $20,00 goes to the artist, and $10.00 goes to the infrastructure.

I've gotten something during each of the prior two drives, and I'll probably continue to do so. I just got back the 4 drawings from the current drive. Program founder Joe Alterio once again did my requests.

I decided on a 4-seasons of China theme.

Here were my triads:

Autumn, Beijing, Moon (the moon festival)
Winter, Tibet, Buddhist
Spring, China, fireworks (the spring festival, or new year)

And, last but not least... "Summer, Xi'an, Warriors," which I will start with:

Presenting: "Qin"

Monday, November 09, 2009

November 9, 2009 Cerebus 82 p 9

eBay item no. 120488362842
Seller: amack56589
Buyer: who knows?
Price: $677.67

Sunday, November 08, 2009

November 8, 2009 PSA

Joe R is taking care of some other business and will get back to "The Morning After" soon. You'll see the updates right after I do.

Today's public service announcement is for the auctions that are up at Heritage and Comiclink... in case you want to get into another bidding contest with me. Snark.





Tuesday, November 03, 2009

Monday, November 02, 2009

November 2, 2009 Joe R Commission

Just got this from Joe Rubinstein.

The draft/sketch for the re-creation of the title page from "The Morning After."

Displayed with permission:

Sunday, November 01, 2009

November 1, 2009 Groucho...

November 1, 2009
eBay item no. 280414905881
Seller: tatteredjeans42, on behalf of DVS
Buyer: alchemist57
Price: $1513.88

Proving, again, that the market prices tend to rule, all things being equal. If there has been any "standard" price for a large color commissioned piece, it would be $1500. I was in at $1545 as my hidden bid, in case you are curious about how I was calling this.