Artist: Frank Bellamy (All)
23 Comments - 1,228 Views - 7 Likes
Artwork Details
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DescriptionWhat more can I say about this absolute thing of beauty? Joel Oppenheimer Gallery here in Chicago did some amazing preservation/restoration work to clean up some glue stains, conduct some archival repair of word balloons and preserve the piece for a much longer future. The piece is certainly worthy of it.Social/Sharing |
About the Owner
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Peter Sullivan
Member Since 2006
1 - Posted on 10/10/2023
It looks great! Glad you have the love of art to get the necessary work done to preserve it for the future. Dan Dare would thank you, if he were not a fictional character.
E DLS
Member Since 2005
1 - Posted on 10/10/2023
Wow! Considering the fact that I am only two months older than this page, I wish I looked half this good. Puts a big smile on my face to see art relics like this not only survive, but absolutely shine! Congrats my friend.
Peter Sullivan
Member Since 2006
1 - Posted on 1/24/2024
E DLS wrote:
Wow! Considering the fact that I am only two months older than this page, I wish I looked half this good. Puts a big smile on my face to see art relics like this not only survive, but absolutely shine! Congrats my friend.
You might look as good if you were professionally conserved.
Marcus Wai
Member Since 2005
1 - Posted on 10/10/2023
Attractive bright colors contrast so finely showing the fire oranges, yellows, and reds against the cool greys and blue. Expertly applied stipple work layer to add shading and hyper realism.
Kasra Ghanbari
Member Since 2004
CAF Administrator
1 - Posted on 10/10/2023
I remember first seeing Dan Dare pages and thinking there's nothing else like them. This page is a prime example!
Mark Howland
Member Since 2004
1 - Posted on 10/10/2023
I love all the little things - the circular panel, the slanted panel, the wing across the gutter - not to mention the whole. Congratulations, Chris!
Shelton Bryant
Member Since 2005
1 - Posted on 10/10/2023
Explosive Late 50's Sci-Fi!! Knock-Out Color!!
Ian Saint
Member Since 2021
1 - Posted on 10/10/2023
Beautiful piece. Love the colors and the theme. Congrats!
Jeff Singh
Member Since 2004
1 - Posted on 10/11/2023
Very cool! There are a lot of diffirent elements to like that are more as a whole than the sum of those parts. The colors are oustanding as the action/dynamics of the page. I really lke the layouts with the angled panels, the circular panel, the breaking of the panel and then the normal tier to slow down after the cadence. I wonder if Bellamy and others were influenced by the layouts in Fiction House comics from this side of the pond. Although content is different, the layouts look like out of a FH book. That exposion is truly spectacular. As a fellow art collector, I thank you for conserving this art. Not enough of us do that as often as we should. We are more consumed with accumulation and the price of new art vs. conservation makes new art a very easy choice most of the time but not necessarily the right choice.
Chris C
Member Since 2004
1 - Posted on 10/11/2023
Look at those Fricken Colors!! Bellamy was so influential on an entire generation (or two) of British artists and this page is a great example of why. It's pure 110 octane imagination jet fuel.
Amir E
Member Since 2020
1 - Posted on 10/11/2023
I absolutely love that bottom left panel. Thanks for posting this beauty!
Terry Doyle
Member Since 2004
1 - Posted on 1/23/2024
Stellar example! Glue stain removal is a great idea, but those caption boxes always went unlettered (the lettering was incorpoarted during the printing process, mechanically - as opposed the hand-drawn lettering of the speech balloons). Looks as though you might have incorporated new (recreated) lettering on those caption boxes? Personally, I'd have shied-away from the idea.
Chris K.
Member Since 2008
1 - Posted on 1/24/2024
Terry Doyle wrote:
Stellar example! Glue stain removal is a great idea, but those caption boxes always went unlettered (the lettering was incorpoarted during the printing process, mechanically - as opposed the hand-drawn lettering of the speech balloons). Looks as though you might have incorporated new (recreated) lettering on those caption boxes? Personally, I'd have shied-away from the idea.
Hey Terry! As you know, I debated heavily on what to do with the word balloons as part of the preservation/conservation process (for those interetested, the mechanical word balloons used during the printing process that Terry references were attacehd to the back of the piece). Ultimately, I decided to have my paper conversation/preservation group use the mechanicals and color-matched reproductions of the caption boxes to create new, archivally placed (i.e., easily reversed/removed) word ballons such that its next owner can decide between what I chose to do and what the piece originally looked like when it came to me. A not inexpensive decision...but a satisfying one from a flexibility standpoint. Appreciate the comment - forgot to explain what I did on this front in my write-up on the piece!
Terry Doyle
Member Since 2004
1 - Posted on 1/24/2024
Chris K. wrote:
Hey Terry! As you know, I debated heavily on what to do with the word balloons as part of the preservation/conservation process (for those interetested, the mechanical word balloons used during the printing process that Terry references were attacehd to the back of the piece). Ultimately, I decided to have my paper conversation/preservation group use the mechanicals and color-matched reproductions of the caption boxes to create new, archivally placed (i.e., easily reversed/removed) word ballons such that its next owner can decide between what I chose to do and what the piece originally looked like when it came to me. A not inexpensive decision...but a satisfying one from a flexibility standpoint. Appreciate the comment - forgot to explain what I did on this front in my write-up on the piece!
Ah, right, they're removable - that's great!
Terry Doyle
Member Since 2004
1 - Posted on 1/23/2024
Oh, and as an afterthought, Al Williamson swiped that bottom tier middle panel for one of his 1960s Flash Gordon comic-books. Come to think of it, Al would often swipe from Hampson and Bellamy artwork!
Chris K.
Member Since 2008
2 - Posted on 1/24/2024
Terry Doyle wrote:
Oh, and as an afterthought, Al Williamson swiped that bottom tier middle panel for one of his 1960s Flash Gordon comic-books. Come to think of it, Al would often swipe from Hampson and Bellamy artwork!
Well, if you are gonna swipe, might as well swipe from the best!
Timothy Finney
Member Since 2006
1 - Posted on 2/28/2025
I am digging your Dan Dare pages. They all have their charms, but this one is a spectacular cut above the others.
Comics Superworld
Member Since 2007
1 - Posted on 8/25/2025
This is so killer! All I can say is . . . Wow!
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