Sell or Auction Your Steve Ditko Comic Art for up to About $100,000 or More at Nate D. Sanders Auctions
FREE APPRAISAL. To buy, auction, sell or consign your Steve Ditko comic art that is for sale, please email your description and photos to [email protected]. Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com) holds monthly auctions and can offer you a high reserve.
We just set the comic art world record for Hal Foster & Prince Valiant comic art prices realized by selling a Sunday for over $70,000. So, now that we at Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com) get world records for your comic art, what are you waiting for? Please email [email protected] today.
See link: https://natedsanders.com/LotDetail.aspx?inventoryid=46704
Sell Steve Ditko Comic Art
Your Steve Ditko comic art can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. He is one of the most famous comic artists of all time.
Here is a Steve Ditko comic art list of items sold (actual sale prices) and we can get these prices for you at our auction. Please phone or write [email protected] for actual sale prices of other Steve Ditko comic art:
Steve Ditko comic art early Amazing Spider-Man with Green Goblin art on this one page, 12.5″ x 18.5″. Over $100,000 in 2017.
Steve Ditko comic art being a Strange Tales on this one page, 12.5″ x 18.5″. Over $65,000 in 2017.
We at NateDSanders.com Comic Art Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com) handled the Ray Bradbury estate of his art collection including tons of animation, comic and illustration art. Here is a write-up from “Melville House” of how well we do selling items similar to Steve Ditko comic art:
October 6, 2014
Ray Bradbury’s weird art collection sells for almost $500,000
Ray Bradbury owned this painting, of Ray Bradbury chilling with a sea monster, a T-Rex, a spaceship, and a lighthouse. It was auctioned recently and is totally rad. (via Nate D. Sanders Auctions)
Ray Bradbury’s strange and somewhat disturbing collection of sci-fi-inspired art sold at auction last week for $493,408. Bradbury, who passed in 2012, revolutionized science fiction writing and was best known for Fahrenheit 451, The Martian Chronicles.Nate D. Sanders Fine Autographs & Memorabilia auctioned off the surreal collection.
Bradbury’s phantasmagoric and uncanny art included paintings of dragon-like creatures attacking lighthouses; the original Louis Glanzman painting for the cover of The Illustrated Man; and a mixed media piece of a grinning Bradbury with a rocket taking off from his head as a sea monster curls around him.
Bradbury has played an instrumental role in the evolution of science fiction since his first book, The Martian Chronicles, was published in 1950 and his influence can be felt both immediately and remotely—in the cyberpunk lit of the 1980s, for instance. Bradbury’s most essential contribution, however, was to the development of the dystopian subgenre. His influence has been especially evident recently, as it reaches from The Hunger Games to Emily St John Mandel’s new dystopian novel Station Eleven, which was longlisted for the National Book Award late last month.
Discussing the popularity of dystopian fiction in an interview with R.L. Stine, Josh Zepps points out that dystopia is a metaphor for the existential uncertainty that underrides so much of modern life. In the 1950s, science fiction reflected the space race, in the 1980s it dreamt on the emergence of computers, and now it hypothesizes on the explosion of worldwide viral epidemics. Bradbury consistently remained ahead of these trends.
The child of Swedish immigrants, Bradbury’s family moved to California from the Midwest when Ray was 14; they arrived in Los Angeles in 1934 with only $40 to their name. Bradbury had begun writing two years earlier and would go on to become one of the most celebrated writers of the 20th century, writing novels, screenplays, and television scripts, and countless stories (and I mean countless—there are dozens of collections); he also became something of a celebrity—he had a dalliance with Bo Derek and drove the Mars Lander (though he himself could not drive), as detailed in Ray Bradbury: The Last Interview coming out this December from Melville House. Seeing this art collection for the first time further reveals the bizarre framing of this brilliant author’s mind.
To see the article, please go to: https://www.mhpbooks.com/ray-bradburys-weird-art-collection-sells-for-almost-500000/
Illustration of item sold in the Ray Bradbury art auction:
FREE APPRAISAL. To buy, auction, sell or consign your Steve Ditko comic art that is for sale, please email your description and photos to [email protected]. Nate D. Sanders Auctions (http://www.NateDSanders.com) holds monthly auctions and can offer you a high reserve.
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