Artwork Details
|
DescriptionI had always read super hero comic books. In junior high, I had found the collections of EC Comics at my local library and spent hours looking through them and reading them. I discovered Alan Moore's Swamp Thing. I had read Watchmen, Dark Knight Returns, and Arkham Asylum. I would get into the Sandman series pretty soon. But There was The Crow.I had heard about the movie and sought out the comics and I was blown away. The story alone was very different than what I'd read before. The art was quite different, with it's mixture of styles. What was the game changer for me was the feeling that was put into the story. Reading it and going back and reading it again, there was feeling there on every page. Sometimes true art is born from raw emotion and that appears to be the case here. James O'Barr working through issues had created a masterpiece. Many years later, I found myself in the lucky position to be able to get an original page from the series. I got the page in the mail, opened it, and ooked at it and was just stunned. As if often the case with these things the page looks so much better in person than the printed version does. Much like the comic and the story that it tells, the art is more than pencil lines, brush strokes, and words, but there is feeling in this page of art. Holding the original you get that sense as you look upon it. I owe a bit of thanks here to Edmond Yanga for making this possible and working out the deal with me. I owe a bigger amount of thanks to James O'Barr for telling this story and putting it to page. Social/Sharing |
About the Owner
|
![]() |
Contact the OwnerUse can use a contact form to send an email to this gallery owner,
|
You must be logged in to make comments.
T Shen
Member Since 2009
Posted on 4/9/2012
Amazing pick up! Wow, what a beautiful page. O'Barr poured so much into this book - I hope to one day own one of these pages one day.
Eric Seffinga
Member Since 2005
Posted on 4/10/2012
I have memories of reading the book and how moving it was time and again. That last panel really hits home. Very cool page to have.
Anthony F
Member Since 2004
Posted on 4/10/2012
Powerful work by O'Barr, I imagine he poured so much emotion into these flashbacks. But my eye is always drawn to his guide, the crow, and the glean in his eye.
Holly Burnett
Member Since 2009
Posted on 4/10/2012
Upon reading The Crow, I was always pulled to this page. It is one of my very favourites due to the tenderness shown and the Crow's words of wisdom in the last panel. So much emotion, enough to bring a person to his knees.
Edmond Yanga
Member Since 2008
Posted on 5/23/2012
This Piece deserves to be In Your Awesome Collection..Congrats..
Alex B
Member Since 2008
Posted on 9/6/2012
One of the best pages of the whole classic series ! Congrats for this beautiful score !
John Braun
Member Since 2011
Posted on 12/20/2012
Amazing page! Love the story, glad it ended up in your collection. Congrats
Dino Mauricio
Member Since 2009
Posted on 1/25/2016
Beautiful Crow page, exquisitely drawn. Congrats Don!
All |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Ultimate X-men, issue #31, pg 5 original by Adam Kubert & Danny Mi |
Alberto Vargas - Nude Pin-Up Preliminary Illustrat |
![]() |
JIM LEE PUNISHER WAR JOURNAL #4 COVER (1989, FLASHBACK TO THE VIETNAM WAR) |
![]() |
John Byrne - Iron Fist #11, Page 17 |
STAR WARS #2 COMIC BOOK PAGE ORIGINAL ART BY HOWARD CHAYKIN. |
Classified Updates |
|
* HoxtonArcade9/7/2025 6:48:00 AM |
|
Rene Dorenbos9/7/2025 5:28:00 AM |
|
David H9/6/2025 9:51:00 PM |
|
Rugrat Spawn9/6/2025 5:47:00 PM |
|
Chris Dietzel9/6/2025 3:38:00 PM |
|
Peter Venkman9/6/2025 2:54:00 PM |
|
Dealer Updates |
|
RomitaMan Original Art9/7/2025 2:23:00 AM |
|
NSN Art9/7/2025 12:01:00 AM |
|
TDArt Gallery9/6/2025 7:54:00 PM |
|
Anthony's Comicbook Art9/6/2025 3:57:00 PM |
|
Coollines Artwork9/6/2025 3:28:00 PM |
|
Will's Comic Art Page9/6/2025 12:52:00 PM |
|
|