Media Relations
Press Release - June 1, 2023
Hero Worship at Heritage Auctions: Simon and Kirby’s Early Captain America Art Joins Pristine Copy of The First Avenger’s Debut Comic Book
| Frank Frazetta’s famous Dark Kingdom joins original art from Bane’s debut by co-creator Graham Nolan, two rare Calvin and Hobbes strips and best-condition Batman books in historic June 22-25 Comic and Comic Art event DOWNLOAD DIGITAL PRESS KIT Better to begin at the beginning, or close enough, with a centerpiece as striking as it is historic: a Jack Kirby-Joe Simon splash page from just the fifth issue of Captain America Comics to hit newsstands, a work so early in the Sentinel of Liberty's forever-unfolding tale that the United States hadn't yet entered the Second World War. This work was a marvel before there was a Marvel, when Cap's publisher was called Timely and Simon and Kirby were scrappy young comers decades away from ascending to the realm of legend. "The best Golden Age Timely art, such as this historic splash page, is basically impossible to find," says Heritage Auctions Senior Vice President Ed Jaster. "Only a scant few pages are even known to exist, and this is the best splash page we've ever seen – by miles – prominently featuring Captain America and Bucky. To describe it as museum quality is only scratching the surface." Eight stories were stuffed into that issue of Captain America Comics No. 5, which hit newsstands on May 5, 1941. Among them: "The Terror That Was Devil's Island," in which Steve Rogers and his sidekick Bucky find their friend Tom Jason held captive by the cruel Commandant Pepo Laroc. All's well that ends well, with Jason freed to join the Greek air force's fight against the Nazis. But this splash, created by Kirby and Simon, hints at the grim realism that marked their early, best work – lean, lithe, brutal, tangible. "The team of Simon and Kirby brought anatomy back into comic books," cartoonist Jules Feiffer wrote in his 1965 book The Great Comic Book Heroes, which for many fledgling fans served as an introduction to and explanation of the medium's Golden Age. "Not that the other artists didn't draw well ... but no one could put quite as much anatomy into a hero as Simon and Kirby. Muscles stretched magically, fore-shortened shockingly. Legs were never less than four feet apart when a punch was thrown. Every panel was a population explosion — casts of thousands: all fighting, leaping, crawling." Nowhere was that more apparent than on their cover of Captain America Comics No. 1, represented in this auction with one of the world's finest issues: a copy graded Near Mint- 9.2 by Certified Guaranty Company. There are but three copies graded higher, making this issue – freshly graded and new to market! – among the most significant copies of one of comicdom's landmark titles. After working with old heroes and New Gods for DC, Kirby returned to Marvel in the mid-1970s, where he revisited Cap until again turning his eyes skyward – toward The Eternals, who may have been Kirby's most cosmic (and controversial) creations. In some ways, the title was a brassy summation of Kirby's career – a gaudy psychedelic freak-out pitting space gods against space gods. The Eternals, which Kirby wrote and drew, lasted but 19 issues, and the entirety of that final issue is available in this event, from cover to climax. To find a complete Kirby is rare enough, but there's more: The original art for this issue, a collaboration with Frank Giacoia and Mike Royer, is signed twice by King Kirby. There is, perhaps, a single work in this event that could overshadow such estimable Kirbys – and it's by the artist who holds Heritage's auction record for comic art, Frank Frazetta. It's entirely possible his Dark Kingdom could shatter the $5.4 million mark set by Egyptian Queen in 2019. After all, it's among his most potent pieces, depicting the swollen warrior with the winged helmet and the blood-dripping ax advancing over the skeletons of the fallen. And it's easily among his most recognizable and reproduced. Also taking their first spin at the auction block are several of Bane co-creator Graham Nolan's earliest originals featuring The Man Who Broke the Bat, among them five pages from his debut appearance in 1993's Batman: Vengeance of Bane No. 1. Nolan offers these pages from his collection from the first time, and they're among the most consequential in the juiced giant's origin story – those few pages where Bane meets the Bat, among them Page 42, where Bane gets his first glimpses Batman and concludes that killing the Dark Knight "will take finesse … requires talent." Here, as well, is the two-page sequence during which Bane and Batman have their first conversation: "Who are you?" asks Batman, to which Bane responds, "You will know my name one day. And on that day you will beg for mercy." "Bane has been an integral part of my life and career since I first conceived of his look back in 1992," Nolan says. "I stopped selling my artwork more than 20 years ago, and some of these pieces have hung in my studio at least that long. This year marks the 30th anniversary of the printing of Bane's first appearance in Batman: Vengeance of Bane, and since then he has gone on to become an iconic character around the world. I can think of no better time to share with the world and the fans that love him the joy Bane and these pages have given me." Of course, this auction has myriad other Dark Knight highlights, including Jim Lee and Scott Williams' cover for Batman No. 610, otherwise known as the third chapter in the "Hush" storyline. In this signed piece, Batman fends off Killer Croc's lethal advances – in the same issue that concludes with Batman and Catwoman locked in a passionate embrace. And from Frank Miller's Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, one of the comics that changed the medium forever, comes a coveted offering: Page 14 from Book Four, which depicts, among other things, Superman trying to save 25 million people from death by a Russian nuclear warhead. As for Batman books, two of the finest known Golden Age offerings make their auction debuts in this event: Batman No. 50 and Batman No. 59, each graded CGC Near Mint+ 9.6 only weeks ago. Each is historical: The former features the first use of "Harvey Dent" to refer to Two-Face, while the Suicide Squad's eventual co-founder Deadshot debuts in the latter (looking more magician than mercenary). But the grades are just as remarkable: No copies of either book are graded higher, and this Batman No. 59 is the single highest-graded example in the world. Heritage is also thrilled to present these two brilliant beauties: original Calvin and Hobbes daily strips among the few ever to reach auction. One dates from March 28, 1986, less than a year into the strip's decade-long run, and features Bill Watterson's 6-year-old boy and his talking (stuffed) tiger donning sunglasses to look "cooler than we are." Watterson gifted the strip to a colleague upon whom he imparted his "best wishes." In an auction packed with milestone works by influential creators, Aline Kominsky-Crumb is right at home. From the woman The New York Times called a "pioneering comics memoirist" upon her death at 74 last year, Heritage is proud to offer the complete 10-page story "Wiseguys" from 1994's Twisted Sisters No. 4, the final issue of the limited series that took its name from the beloved and influential 1976 one-shot. It's one of Kominsky-Crumb's funniest stories, a flashback to the early 1960s filled with her father and his sketchy friends known to collect things that "fell" off the back of trucks. It's Martin Scorsese filtered through the underground guest-starring Robert Crumb instead of Robert DeNiro. "Wiseguys" is the story she recounted to the Huffington Post in 2017, when she said, "My father was a wannabe criminal. If he could have been a 'Goodfella,' he would have. But he wasn't Italian. He was Jewish. So he was a total loser." On the other hand, his daughter changed how women told their stories, and comic books would never be the same. Heritage Auctions is the largest fine art and collectibles auction house founded in the United States, and the world's largest collectibles auctioneer. Heritage maintains offices in New York, Dallas, Beverly Hills, Chicago, Palm Beach, London, Paris, Geneva, Amsterdam and Hong Kong. Heritage also enjoys the highest Online traffic and dollar volume of any auction house on earth (source: SimilarWeb and Hiscox Report). The Internet's most popular auction-house website, HA.com, has more than 1,600,000 registered bidder-members and searchable free archives of 6,000,000 past auction records with prices realized, descriptions and enlargeable photos. Reproduction rights routinely granted to media for photo credit. For breaking stories, follow us: HA.com/Facebook and HA.com/Twitter . Link to this release or view prior press releases . Hi-Res images available: Robert Wilonsky, VP Public Relations and Communications 214-409-1887 or RobertW@HA.com |

