18 Views
1
View In My Room
Douglas Arthur
United States
Canvas
14 x 21 in ($151)
Black Canvas
White ($150)
18 Views
1
Special color print I created in 2015 as a bonus for my Kickstarter campaign when I launched the deluxe re-issues of my first four books. This is a colorized version of Tales From the Dougside strip #61 from May 19, 1993 and originally published in Nightlife Magazine, Buffalo, NY in black and white. Scanned from the original artwork and then colorized in Photoshop. There were only 30 prints made in 2015. I sold the original page to a collector at a comic convention a few years back, so only prints available. The idea for this came from my love of George Romero movies and EC Comics, coupled with the then current storyline of the Death of Superman in the DC comics. It was a crazy time in the comic book industry and there was a frenzy of public interest outside of the normal collector circles for the Death of Superman comic itself. I thought I would have a bit of fun by combining the two. I guess it is also a bit of a nod to the old Marvel series, What If...? from the 70's and 80's...as it turned out I was a bit ahead of the curve; the superhero/zombie crossover didn't really happen until 2005's Marvel Zombies series. When I decided to start selling my original art at conventions in 2015, this was the first to go!
Giclee on Canvas
14 W x 21 H x 1.25 D in
15.75 W x 22.75 H x 1.25 D in
White
Black Canvas
Yes
Ships in a Box
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships in a box. Art prints are packaged and shipped by our printing partner.
Printing facility in California.
Please visit our help section or contact us.
United States
I started writing and drawing my own comic strips and comic books when I was nine years old, and took a broader interest in art as I grew older, delving into painting, sculpture, and digital media. I started a weekly comic strip when I was a student at the University At Buffalo called Tales From the Dougside (yes, indeed, a pun on the George Romero produced TV series, Tales From the Darkside) in 1988. The satirical strip eventually migrated to a weekly entertainment paper, Nightlife Magazine in March 1992, where it ran until November 1998. In 1995 I self-published my first collection, SlackJaw, with three more following in 1996, and 1997. In 2000, My third book, Tainted Circus, was included in an exhibit of "underground publishing" at the University At Buffalo's prestigious Poetry And Rare Books Collection in Capen Hall. A chance encounter with musician Robert Fripp in 2005 led to a short story being published on the official King Crimson website, DGMLive in February 2012. This sparked a return to publishing in 2013. Eleven books have been created since, including a career spanning compendium, Antisocial Lawnmower in 2013, deluxe reprints of the original four books in 2015, and the most recent, The Nefarious Nomenclature of Norman Nigglebottom in 2020. Recently, Vermont's current Cartoonist Laureate, Rick Veitch, reprinted two of my strips in issue 24 of his experimental series Roarin' Rick's Rarebit Fiends. Tales From the Dougside derives its power mainly from pop culture, and artistically it has much more in common with underground and independent comics from the likes of Spain Rodriguez, Gahan Wilson, Robert Crumb, Rick Geary, Dave Sim, and Will Eisner with a dash or two of Frank Miller, Gary Trudeau, Gary Larson, and the more surreal eras of Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko's careers.
We deliver world-class customer service to all of our art buyers.
Our 14-day satisfaction guarantee allows you to buy with confidence.
Explore an unparalleled artwork selection by artists from around the world.
We pay our artists more on every sale than other galleries.