14 Results
Thank you for loaning this art to "Colleen Doran Illustrates Neil Gaiman" in New York and San Diego. Museum visitors enjoyed seeing it and I included it in several presentations with Colleen.
I just displayed this page in NY and Rome, along with some other 70s pages from Trina's collection as examples of how the women's comix of the 70s, especially "It Ain't Me Babe," broke ground for generations of women cartoonists to follow. If you want to see some images from Trina's collection, there are some exhibit photos on my website here: http://www.neuroticraven.com/blog/2020/5/20/women-in-comics-photo-grid
This is beautiful. I love simple things like his brushstroke in the water and grass. The finished version is a lot more formal. Thanks for pointing this out.
Awesome! I have always wondered. I knew Trina was right but could never find it. Thank you!
I am proud to have these. I found them at SDCC. This was a birthday present for my husband because these are his favorite Marvel characters.
I was lucky to meet him one year at Wondercon went he needed to sell a bunch of pages. I also have a beautiful page of Godzilla sinking the Titanic and a commissioned headshot. I will try to post once I get going with this.
Thank you! I have several early Witchblade interiors. A few years ago we were lucky to get four or five of them from Frank at Aspen. This one is my absolute favorite. It's one that actually lost a lot of detail in print. I will try to post more once I get going with this.
Hi Morgan - I'm curating a show of Colleen's work in NY and would like to borrow this beautiful cover art from you. Did you get a message from me?
Hi Alan - I'm curating a show of Colleen's work in NY and I would like to borrow things from you. Did you get a message from me?
I am curating a show of Colleen's work in NY and would like to borrow some of these pieces. Did you get a message from me?
Thank you! I'm a curator currently assembling a show of art by Colleen Doran's adaptions of Neil Gaiman stories. I recently showed 100 pieces from Trina's collection at the Society of Illustrators in NY. This piece is just astounding to me. The old style and (at the time) the current one. Trina told me that this was published as a pin-up around the time she was doing the "Legend of Wonder Woman" series (1987-ish) but I have never found it.
Thank you! I am grateful to have it. I bought it from Denis Kitchen at NYCC a couple of years ago.