Classic Comics in Print: A Tour of the Gold Mine

Although finding classic comics on the web is great, printed comics are more pleasing to read than ones read on a computer monitor, in my view. Good reprints of classic comics used to be relatively hard to come by… we now live in a world filled with many reprints of the greatest work from comics history… it is truly an embarrassment of riches (although there is still, of course, huge amounts of beautiful neglected stuff… I’ll talk about that in future posts).

This article will provide an overview of some of the great reprinted material that is out there, in no particular order.

Cover to E.C. Segar's Popeye Volume 1

1) Fantagraphics Books (fantagraphics.com) is indeed the world’s greatest publisher of comics, and they offer a huge selection of amazing reprints among their wares (along with some of the best new stuff you’ll find anywhere). They are currently reprinting some of the greatest comics of all time, and doing it with style, class, historical research, and good design (which is not true of many of the other comics reprint publishers).

Here you can find (in progress) the complete George Herriman Krazy Kat Sundays (and a dailies overview book coming soon, all beautifully designed by Chris Ware… the Sunday books will also be including Herriman’s Stumble Inn Sundays), the complete Charles Schulz Peanuts, the complete Elzie Segar Popeye (a new series just started… they reprinted these previously in excellent but inferior black and white volumes), the complete Walt Kelly Pogo (new series coming soon), the complete Walt Kelly Our Gang, a volume of Otto Messmer’s Felix the Cat, the complete Harold Gray Little Orphan Annie (new series coming soon), the complete Hal Foster Prince Valiant, the complete Hank Ketcham Dennis the Menace, some great Winsor McCay reprints, the collected works of Jules Feiffer, a new printing of The Comic Strip Art of Lyonel Feininger (coming soon) and more.

In addition to all the great old strip reprints and great modern stuff, they have also produced a number of reprints of some of the best in underground and more recent comics, including The Complete Crumb, Foolbert Sturgeon’s The New Adventures of Jesus, some Jack Jackson reprints, and a ton of Vaughn Bode stuff.

Besides all of those wonders, they publish the Comics Journal, which now includes a healthy chunk of comics in every issue, generally reprinted from obscure sources.

Please note that Fantagraphics is currently suffering very serious and expensive legal troubles, and they have started a legal defense fund to help with this. One of the best ways you can assist them is to BUY THEIR BOOKS, preferably directly from them. A good cause like this is a great way to help justify doing yourself the favor of purchasing some their vast array of wonderful books.

2) Drawn and Quarterly (drawnandquarterly.com), another wonderful publisher of comics, is currently publishing beautifully designed reprints of Frank King’s Gasoline Alley (published as Walt and Skeezix) and Tove Jansson’s Moomin. Their Yoshihiro Tatsumi reprints have been very interesting… Tatsumi was (and presumably still is) quite the innovator in presenting adult content in comics, and I had never seen any of his work before these reprints. They have a Clare Briggs’ Oh Skin-nay! reprint in the works as well.

Cover to Walt and Skeezix Volume 1

3) Spec Productions (specproductions.com) produces many small press reprints of obscure and wonderful stuff, with an emphasis on old adventure strips including Captain Easy, Flash Gordon, Buck Rogers, Alley Oop… and Gasoline Alley!

Besides adventure strips, they are producing some great George Herriman reprints called By George! The Komplete Daily Komics of George Herriman edited by comics historian Bill Blackbeard (full disclosure: I designed the covers for volumes 2-4). These books reprint much Herriman stuff you won’t find anywhere else, including the first Krazy Kat strips!

Cover to By George Volume 2

Krazy Kat got her start as a footer strip for Herriman’s comic strip The Dingbat Family (aka The Family Upstairs)… this series aims to reprint that entire series, along with all Herriman’s other dailies (the first volume includes the entire runs of Herriman’s daily strips Baron Mooch and Gooseberry Sprig!).

Also cool about these Herriman reprints, these strips are reprinted at the full size they appeared in the newspaper, which is BIG. You’ll probably want this on the same shelf as your Complete Segar Popeye series from Fantagraphics!

Note that they are also selling A Supplement to The Yellow Kid which is presumably a supplement to the currently out of print (although still relatively inexpensive) R.F. Outcault’s the Yellow Kid: A Centennial Celebration of the Kid Who Started the Comics.

4) The Pacific Comics Club (pacificcomics.com) also offers a variety of small press reprints of stuff that you won’t find elsewhere.

They also have a series of Herriman books, these ones reprinting Herriman’s Krazy Kat dailies (full disclosure: George Herriman is probably my favorite cartoonist of all time). Wonderful stuff… unfortunately, the Krazy Kat strips are reprinted at a very small size… they are well worth owning regardless, seeing as you can’t currently get them anywhere else.

Cover to Pacific's Krazy Kat Dailies 1923

Pacific is also carrying the gorgeous and long out-of-print 2 volume set of Cliff Sterrett’s Polly and Her Pals reprints that came out from Remco in the 80’s… don’t miss these. Sterrett is a master… Polly and Her Pals is expressionistic, beautiful and hilarious… it is one of the greatest comic strips of all time. The cheapest used copy they have on Amazon is over twice the price.

5) Sunday Press Books (sundaypressbooks.com) recently produced an enormous book of Winsor McCay’s Little Nemo in Slumberland, published at the actual size the original strips appeared (16×21 inches).

Cover to Sunday Press Books' Little Nemo

I haven’t seen the book, but it has received rave reviews all over the place… apparently, the strips look better than they ever have before (including than they did in the newspaper 100 years ago). They are planning a second volume. They are also planning a collection of McCay’s Little Sammy Sneeze.

Besides the McCay reprints, they are planning additional projects in this enormous format include a reprint of Gasoline Alley Sundays called Sundays With Walt and Skeezix designed by Chris Ware, and a 7 or 8 volume collection of miscellaneous old newspaper comics… I gotta start saving my pennies… read more here.

6) Checker Books (checkerbpg.com) I’ve been buying their comprehensive reprinting of Winsor McCay’s Early Works (8 volumes so far), and it looks like they are adding an oversized Little Nemo reprint, an oversized Dream of the Rarebit Fiend Saturdays reprint, and an oversized book of some of Winsor McCay’s Editorial Works.

Even more exciting (to me) they are starting a series of books reprinting miscellaneous Dr. Seuss editorial cartoons and illustration work. They also are reprinting Flash Gordon, Steve Canyon and Dick Tracy (the Max Collins stuff rather than the Chester Gould).

Cover to Checker's Theodor Seuss Geisel: The Early Works Volume 1

7) IDW Publishing (idwpublishing.com) recently started publishing a complete set Chester Gould’s bizarre and stylized Dick Tracy.

Cover to IDW Publishing's reprint of Chester Gould's Dick Tracy Volume 1

8) Lee Valley (leevalley.com) Here’s a weird one. Lee Valley offers reprints of Out Our Way, Our Boarding house with Major Hoople, and The Bull of the Woods, as well as cowboy and US Calvary cartoons… and a whole lotta books on woodworking. Go figure.

Cover to Lee Valley's reprint of Out Our Way

9) NBM Books (nbmpub.com), an excellent comics publisher probably known mostly for their reprints of modern European comics (they’ve reprinted some great Lewis Trondheim, Joann Sfar and Jacques Tardi books… and they are the major publisher of underrated American cartooning genius Rick Geary) appears to be getting into the comic strip reprinting game… they have a reprint of Mutt and Jeff (the first daily comic strip) listed on Amazon. Here’s an article about the reprint (the strip was originally titled A. Mutt).

Cover to NBM's Forever Nuts: The Early Years of Mutt and Jeff

Digressing, here’s an interesting bit of comics history about Mutt and Jeff. The Mutt and Jeff comic started in the sports section of newspapers, and part of the reason it became hugely popular (besides the fact that it was really funny) was that apparently some people thought you could get tips on what racehorses were destined to win from the strip.

10) Hogan’s Alley magazine regularly reprints a chunk of classic comics that you won’t see anywhere else. It is the closest thing out there right now to the sorely missed Nemo Magazine published long ago by Fantagraphics, which had a wealth of comics history in it (you can still hunt down back issues of Nemo pretty cheap on Ebay).

Cover to an issue of Hogan's Alley

11) DC Comics (dccomics.com) has a series called DC Archives that reprints mostly various Time-Warner-owned properties. Some highlights of this (in my view) are Will Eisner’s excellent series The Spirit (which is actually not a Time-Warner property, as far as I know), Mad (only one volume so far, alas), Plastic Man, and Captain Marvel (Shazam!). Lots of good obvious stuff too, like Superman and Batman. I wish they’d reprint Fox and Crow!

Cover to a volume of the Will Eisner The Spirit reprint series

Unfortunately, these books are awfully expensive… around 50 bucks each, depending on the volume. They really need to put these out in paperbacks.

Note that although they have only reprinted one issue of Mad as a book, they just released every issue of mad on a DVD set.

On the subject of complete magazines on DVD, you can get the Complete Cartoons of the New Yorker this way as well, or the Complete New Yorker if you want to get more than just the comics. I heard somewhere recently they were going to put out the complete Playboy magazines & cartoons this way as well.

12) Marvel Comics (marvel.com) has two reprint series of their stuff… their Marvel Masterworks series and their Essentials series. The Essentials series is no frills, black and white, phonebook-like, and cheap. The Masterworks series is color, slick, and mostly hardcover and overpriced like the DC Archives. However, they recently reprinted some paperback Masterworks volumes with Barnes and Noble that are VERY cheap… especially when you find them on the discount shelves at Barnes and Noble. Highlights of this stuff (in my view) would be the Ditko/Lee Spiderman, the Kirby/Lee Fantastic Four and the Steve Gerber Howard the Duck (only available as an Essentials volume).

Cover to the Essentials Howard the Duck reprint

It is worth noting, that, although the paper of the essentials volumes is cheap and will probably deteriorate rapidly over time, a lot of this stuff looks better to me in black and white than color (a lot of the coloring they are using just looks unpleasantly garish on slick paper).

Marvel has started to explore complete DVD collections of their archives as well… here’s the complete Spider-Man on DVD.

13) Dark Horse Comics (darkhorse.com) is currently doing a great, very affordable reprint series of John Stanley and Irving Tripp’s Little Lulu. They’ve also reprinted some great old Japanese comics, including Osamu Tezuka’s Astro Boy and Kazuo Koike’s Lone Wolf and Cub. They also published the reprints of Bob Burden’s Flaming Carrot, which, while not that old, is a classic comic in my view.

Cover to a volume of Dark Horse's Little Lulu reprint series

14) Russ Cochran, who has done a number of wonderful reprints of the output of EC Comics in the past has started a new series of full-color hardcover reprints of them. He’s starting this series with reprints of Weird Science and Shock SupenStories.

Cover to a volume of Russ Cochran's Shock Supenstories reprint series

15) American Comic Archive (americancomicarchive.com) is publishing a magazine called Big Fun, which reprints some classic adventure comics including the Leslie Turner Captain Easy.

Cover to an issue of American Comic Archives' Big Fun Magazine

16) Rick Norwood’s Manuscript Press is the publisher of long-running strip reprint magazine Comics Revue.

Cover to an issue of Manuscript Press' Comics Revue Magazine

If you are planning to buy some of these books (and aren’t planning on doing it directly from the publishers), you should really check out Bud Plant, as they have the world’s most mouth-watering catalog of wonderful comics-related and other art books, many at insane discount off of the cover price, and for every $100 you spend they give you $10 off your next order. They also have a lot of signed books with special bookplates that you can get nowhere else… and generally these bonuses cost no more than the regular price of the books. They carry the majority of the stuff mentioned in this article, as well as a number of great reprint books that are long out of print, like volumes of the Kitchen Sink Press reprints of Al Capp’s Li’l Abner.

Another resource is Ken Pierce Books (kenpiercebooks.com), which offers a number of strip reprints for sale… I don’t believe they published any of them, but they may have. Again, Bud Plant I think is probably the best resource for getting a bunch of this stuff in one place, but this site may have some stuff that Bud Plant doesn’t.

Isn’t Amazon really making enough money off of all of us as it is? Please consider supporting your local comic book stores as well whenever you make comics-related purchases… if you don’t support them, they disappear.

That said, I haven’t seen this Krazy Kat dailies 1918-1919 reprint (published by Stinging Monkey Press, now defunct) available anywhere recently except for Amazon. I can’t get enough Kat, as you may have noticed… so I’ll also mention that there is a wonderful Krazy Kat: The Comic Art of George Herriman book which provides a great overview of Herriman published by Abrams and co-edited by Patrick McDonnell (author of the best comic strip in today’s papers, Mutts).

Want to read these books and can’t afford them? I can relate! Thank heavens for the public library. Did you know if you request books and other materials from your local public library, they will often buy them? My public library even has a form on their website for such requests. It’s likely your library does also.

Request the comics you want to read at your local library and you do all of the patrons of that library a favor by spreading the good comics love. Although it has improved greatly in recent years, most libraries do not have nearly the comics collections that they should… help them find the good stuff!

I’m sure there are some good reprint projects I haven’t heard about… know of any? Let us hear about them in the comments!

UPDATE: Dirk Deppey of The Comics Journal and the excellent ¡Journalista! blog pointed out another reprint publisher on the Comics Journal Message board… here it is:

17) Classic Comics Press (classiccomicspress.com) is currently publishing reprint books of Leonard Starr’s Mary Perkins On Stage and Gus Edson and Irwin Hasen’s Dondi. I’m not particularly familiar with either strip, but the examples of Dondi I’ve seen seemed pretty good. On Stage has a lot of rave reviews here, including one from the aforementioned Mr. Deppey.

Thanks for the heads up Dirk!

UPDATE #2: I thought of another one I forgot…

18) Pure Imagination has offered reprints of works by Basil Wolverton, Jack Cole, Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, Alex Toth and more. Their Wolverton reprints are quite wonderful… I wish someone would do a complete reprinting of everything Wolverton ever did. If they have a website, I sure can’t find it. You can see a list of some of their output here, and there is a wikipedia entry about them here.

Recent Interesting Links: 02/27/07

Recent Interesting Links: February 23, 2007

Classic Comics on the Web

Panel from R.F. Outcault's Buster Brown reprint from Barnaclepress.com
In a post on his site expressing the joy of living in a world full of an untold wealth of classic comics reprint books, Mike Lynch just provided a nice list of places to find great old comics on the web as well as in print… most of these I knew about, but he had a couple that were new to me. Here are his links:

Coconino World is a huge site, in French and English, that celebrates a lot of classic cartoonists. If you go to this page, you can start looking at Swinnerton, McManus, etc.

Shane Glines’ Cartoon Retro (subscription only), celebrates classic cartoon illustrators. Lots of stuff here. Join up for a month. I did.

Andy’s Early Comics Archive is an incredible collection of cartoons through the centuries with tremendously large scan for much oohing and aahing. I love the page of photos and caricatures of cartoonists here.

Craig Yoe’s Arf Lover’s Blog is a wonderful collection of cool stuff. I always wind up spending time looking at old gag cartoons, old comics and other items of delight that Craig has.

Stripper’s Guide by Allan Holtz is not as racy as it sounds. Lots of great old comic strips here.

Barnacle Press is a trove of old features from the comics pages.

Arnold Wagner’s Cartoonology always has the insider stories about cartooning and comics.

Leif Peng’s Today’s Inspiration blog tends to be more about post-war illustration, but the site is such an interesting place to visit and it’s full of vintage material, that it’s worth a looksee.

These site all have a wealth of great stuff on them… some of them, like the amazing Barnacle Press, have rss feeds you can subscribe to too. check them out. Here are some additional places you can find classic comics on the web:

1) Yahoo Groups has a number of great classic comics groups that will deliver great comics to your email box (I just wish that Yahoo did a better job of archiving these posts for viewing on the web). There are far too many to list here, but here are some of highlights:

PlatinumAgeComics is a GREAT group featuring pre-1938 comics that sends stuff all the time… most of which you are highly unlikely to have ever seen before. You have to request membership to the group… and what a membership they have! Many notable comics historians and cartoonists are vary active participants in this excellent group. If you find this interesting, you’ll also want to subscribe to PlatPics, their related picture posting group.

There are a number of Yahoo groups with posts for various old strips… the regularity of the posts vary greatly from group to group… search around for your favorite old strips and there may be a group for them. One of the best I’ve subscribed to is Roger Langridge‘s GoogleGang group which sends out dailies of Billy DeBeck’s great, hilarious strip Barney Google (which is in desperate need of a good, complete print reprinting).

2) Scans Daily offers frequently updated scans of old and new comics, generally from comic books.

3) The guide to the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art Collection (founded by Comics Historian Bill Blackbeard) doesn’t have complete comics, but has panel samples and references to work by many artists that you won’t find anywhere else on the web. The offline collection is almost certainly the most complete collection of newspaper comics history anywhere. Most of comics history would have been obliterated if it hadn’t been for the pioneering collecting efforts of Blackbeard and a handful of other comics historians. Indeed, virtually all classic comics reprints owe a debt to Blackbeard and his collection. Thanks Bill!

Note that some or all of this collection was donated a while ago to the Ohio State University Comics Research Library, the biggest library of comics-related research materials in the world (you can read more about some of their amazing collection at this link).

I wish they did a better job of representing this amazing collection online… it’s a good reason to visit Ohio, though! They also host the Festival of Cartoon Art, if you want another reason to visit them. There is also a large collection of ancient strip clippings at Michigan State University.

4) Comicsresearch.org has a huge list of cartoonists around the web (along with a lot of other interesting stuff), with links to their works and related information.

5) I’ve never ordered anything from them but this site and this site offer a number of very obscure old comic books on cd.

6) Here’s a free classic comic book of the week from comic-art.com (although I don’t know if they actually update it weekly or not).

7) For an enormous treasure trove of comic book cover images, see the Grand Comic Book Database. It’s a great project amassing a huge amount of information about every comic ever printed, similar to the Internet Movie Database, but for comics.

8) Excellent comics and comics history magazine Hogan’s Alley offers a number of interesting features on their website, including some great classic comics reprints.

Panel from R.F. Outcault's Buster Brown reprint at Barnaclepress.com

Know of more great places to look at old comics online? Let us hear about them in the comments!

Song of the Hobo

If I hadn’t gone and made the mistake of doing something with my life, I would have been a hobo.

A while back I participated in the 700 Hobos Project. This project succeeded in having cartoonists from around the globe draw pictures of the hobos mentioned in John Hodgman’s wonderful book of all knowledge, The Areas of My Expertise (you can download the audio version of this absolutely hilarious book here for free). You can hear Mr. Hodgman recitation of his list of Hobo names here. You can see all of the drawings from the project here… currently there are 1430 drawings of the 700 hobos.

Fortunately for weekend hobos and hobo wannabes, the internet has provided the world with a repository of hobo knowledge… not that any true hobo would ever set finger on a conblasted contrapulated computer… hobo poseurs, however, have no such scruples.

For example this site and this one will illuminate you with information on hobo signs and symbols. This will enable those of us in the Johnson Family with a watchful eye and ragged dress to find free pie and coffee, or a hay loft in which to lay a weary head.

Alas, the hobo codes are under-utilized these days… I wish some of the tag-happy spray-painters of the modern world would get over peeing arcane versions of their names on walls and start providing us with useful hoboese instead.

The amazingly wonderful music site juneberry78s.com has a bunch of great public domain music, some of which is about the noble hobo. I have purloined the relevant tracks for your edification here:

Asa Martin – The Contented Hobo

Asa Martin – The Wandering Hobo

Travis B. Hale – Dying Hobo

Cliff Carlisle – Hobo Blues

Andrews Brothers – Hobo’s Life Is Lonely

Peg Leg Howell- Hobo Blues

While you are listening to these old tunes of the lonesome, lice-infested road, here are some images I made for the 700 Hobos project to peruse and ponder simultaneously.

Hobo 002: Cholly the Yegg

Hobo 002: Cholly the Yegg

Cholly the Yegg was once a wealthy man, but he left his fortune behind for life on the rails. Many claim it was bad investments that led him to this fate, a claim which Cholly denies wholeheartedly. Cholly insists that he just needed the simplicity of sleeping under the stars with a knapsack full of dreams and open roads leading in all directions. Of course, the liquor may have had something to do with it too, not to mention the embezzlement accusations, but we prefer Cholly’s interpretation of events. For he is Cholly the Yegg for a reason… not for his portly stature… not for his fondness for eating 3 pickled eggs for lunch every single day of the week… but because, when you see him walk away into the sunset, you can’t help but think to yourself, “there goes a good yegg.

hobo # 301: Captain Slicktalk

Hobo # 301: Captain Slicktalk

No one has seen Captain Slicktalk around lately… could it be that he finally sold the Golden Gate Bridge? More likely he borrowed a bottom dollar from the wrong bum and didn’t pay it back. The Captain will never learn.

hobo # 477: Unshakably Morose Flo

Hobo # 477: Unshakably Morose Flo

Unshakably Morose Flo rides the Greyhound endlessly, always choosing whatever destination is farthest away. She would spill her guts to you if she could, but she can no longer see anyone… she is not physically blind, only terminally stunned. It is no matter, for she has become virtually invisible to the world, although they can smell her long after she leaves a room. Furthermore, madness and mania sank in long ago, and her conversational abilities have atrophied, she speaks to no one but herself. She wears her tragedy like a noose and wonders why the breath has not yet been sucked from her lungs… what god could be so cruel to let her live through this?

hobo # 575: Ammonia Cocktail Jones

Hobo # 575: Ammonia Cocktail Jones

Ammonia Cocktail Jones is a poor drinking buddy. Infested backwash is the least of your worries, believe me, should you have the misfortune of sharing a drink with this man. Whether it is his bottle or yours is irrelevant… when he is around, dehydration is your friend.

—————————

Note that Ammonia Coctail Jones, along with another comic of mine, will be appearing in the newly published anthology about drinking from Spout Press, Lush: A Poetry Anthology and Cocktail Guide . You can order the book from Spout press directly here. Tonight there is a cocktail release party for the book in Minneapolis at the Nomad World Pub.

Lush: A Poetry Anthology and Cocktail Guide

Collecting (or Just Admiring) Comic Art Online

I rarely have the money to collect comic art, unfortunately, but I often enjoy browsing artwork that is for sale online. Often you can find unpublished and obscure work by artists, and frequently you can see elements in the artwork that you don’t see in the final published versions. Here are some of the better places I’ve found online for viewing original comic art.

The Comic Art Collective (comicartcollective.com)

Fantagraphics Books site featuring art by cartoonists they publish, primarily… Jamie Hernandez (where’s Gilbert?), Peter Bagge, Tony Millionaire (who also has a ton of original art on his maakies site), Doug Allen, Colleen Coover, Dave Cooper and many more. Since they publish a good number of the world’s greatest cartoonists, this is well worth a look. Besides Gilbert Hernandez, also notably absent are Jim Woodring and Robert Crumb, who sell their stuff at the links on their names (Woodring can also be found here, and Crumb can also be found here). Also notably absent is Chris Ware, who has no regular place that he is selling work that I know of (although he has some work at the Adam Baumgold Gallery, below). The Comic Art Collective also has a recent additions page where you can see recent work added by all of the artists they represent in one place.

Jamie Hernandez Art from The Comic Art Collective Site
The Beguiling (beguiling.com)

An excellent comic shop from Toronto that sells work from a number of great cartoonists, including many of the artists published by wonderful publisher Drawn and Quarterly, and many Canadian cartoonists… great stuff by Paul Pope, Dave Cooper, Chester Brown, Kevin Huizenga (who also sells stuff here), Joe Matt, Seth, Julie Doucet, Dave Sim (who also sells and commissions work here) and many more. I’m still kicking myself for not scoring a Marc Bell orignal from them when I could have, alas… he’s no longer there. As with the Comic Art Collective, they keep everything they sold online for you to see as well (and cry about what you missed for sale, as a lot of the stuff is cheap!).

Paul Pope original from The Beguiling

Denis Kitchen Art Agency (deniskitchenartagency.com)

Denis Kitchen, former Kitchen Sink Press publisher and underground cartoonist, represents some of the best cartoonists in comics history and their estates, including Robert Crumb, Harvey Kurtzman and Will Eisner.

Will Eisner Original From Denis Kitchen Art Agency

The Adam Baumgold Gallery (adambaumgoldgallery.com)

Has work by Chris Ware, Marc Bell, Julie Doucet, Jules Feiffer and some other cartoonists (as well as lots of “fine art,” if you like that sort of thing).

Chris Ware Original From The Adam Baumgold Gallery

Albert Moy Comic Art (albertmoy.com)

A comic art dealer who has been around for a long time… I remember his Gahan Wilson illustrated ads from the Comic Book Price Guides in the 70’s. He has work from a ton of great cartoonists including Dan O’Neill, Bob Burden, Jack Kirby, Antonio Prohias, Jack Davis, and many, many more.


Dan O'Neill Original Art Found at Albert Moy Comic Art

Heritage Online Auctions (comics.ha.com)

A big auction site that has some of the biggest, best scans of amazing original comics art you’re likely to find anywhere… they usually have a George Herriman original or two, among other beautiful things… they have a great selection of stuff by many long dead comics artists.

Best of all, they have a permanent auction archive, where you can view all kinds of glorious stuff… I think you need to be a member to access it.

Hand-Colored George Herriman Krazy Kat Sunday from Heritage Online Auctions


comicartfans.com

A comic art site with a great site search. In addition to selling stuff, they provide access for people to post images of their collections for online display.

Basil Wolverton Original Art found at comicartfans.com

Comicartfans.com also highlights auctions on the inevitable…

Ebay (collectibles.ebay.com/Comics)

Obvious, I know, but for sheer volume of stuff, nothing else compares.

Otto Messmer Original Art found on Ebay

Besides all of that… did you know you can commission a David Boswell original for as little as $49? I gotta get around to doing that the next time I have the cash…

David Boswell Commissioned Piece from reidfleming.com

Lots of comics artists maintain their own artwork and sell their own work online… a google search for your favorite artist to find their personal website is always the best place to look for art by that artist… then the artist gets all the money you’re paying for it without a middleman getting a cut, which is a nice thing. If they aren’t offering artwork on the site, you can always consider emailing them directly about it, too, if they have contact info.

Know of more great places to browse comics art? Please let me hear about them in the comments.