(Stock Image)
SOLD ON: Monday, 05/18/2020 9:19 PM
This auction has ended.
PUBLISHER: Marvel
COMMENTS: Jack Kirby pencils/Dick Ayers inks; It Fell from the Flying Saucer! pg 6; 1962; image size 12.5" x 18.5"
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Jack Kirby pencils/Dick Ayers inks; It Fell from the Flying Saucer! pg 6; 1962; image size 12.5" x 18.5"Be weary of strange gifts, or was it just your imagination? Beautiful ending to the story in this twice-up page by Kirby and Ayers. Classic Marvel Sci-fi art. Pen and ink. Art is in very good condition, there is glue residue beneath the lower tier of panels.
The other five pages from this story are available for bidding in this auction as separate listings.
From The Jack Kirby Comics Weblog.
“It Fell From the Flying Saucer” is a Kirby/Ayers 6-pager from TALES TO ASTONISH #31 (1962). An artist in the park is the only witness to a flying saucer, and sees a pencil drop from it. Recognizing a quality pencil, he tries it out and sees that everything he draws comes to life. After some tests (like putting himself on Mount Rushmore and bringing Cleopatra, Caesar and Davy Crockett to life) he decides to make himself the ruler of the world. It works, but when no one believes his story about the flying saucer, he draws it, and it returns, and a tentacle comes out and takes back the pencil, causing everything to vanish and go back to how it was, with no memory of what happened.
This is a fun story, with a lot of cliched elements, but really well told. I especially like the middle, where he’s experimenting with the pencil, giving Kirby a chance to draw some fanciful stuff. This is one I’d include in a collection of Kirby’s best pre-hero Marvel work.
Artists Information
Jack Kirby is called 'The King of Comics' for a reason, during his career that spanned six decades he gave us many of the most iconic characters the medium would ever see. From his introduction of Captain America at the height of World War II it was clear he wasn't your ordinary comics artist. But it was his creative explosion at Marvel Comics in the 1960's that cemented his legacy, over a short period of time Kirby would give us The Fantastic Four, Iron Man, The Hulk, The X-Men, Thor, Ant-Man and Nick Fury just to name a few. Kirby would then go to DC and create his Fourth World, introducing Darkseid, Mister Miracle, The New Gods and a host of cosmic supporting players. Long live The King.
Richard "Dick" Ayers was an American comic book artist and cartoonist best known for his work as one of the main inkers during the late-1950's and 1960's Silver Age of Comics, including some of the earliest issues of Marvel Comics' including Jack Kirby's The Fantastic Four. He is the signature penciler of Marvel's World War II comic Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos, drawing it for a 10-year run, and he co-created Magazine Enterprises' 1950s Western-horror character the Ghost Rider, a version of which he would draw for Marvel in the 1960s. His career would span 7 decades until his death in 2014.