4

Alex Raymond original artwork published in LOOK Magazine October 20, 1942 - 'how peace will come..."

Currency:USD Category:Comics Start Price:10,000.00 USD Estimated At:10,000.00 - 15,000.00 USD
Alex Raymond original artwork published in LOOK Magazine October 20, 1942 - 'how peace will come...
First time bidders that are "Pending Approval" are subject to a credit card authorization.

Please submit form early to be approved.

Use the following link to download the PDF form.

https://profilesinhistory.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/Authorization-Form-.pdf

Please download form, print, fill out, sign and return to mm@profilesinhistory.com
4. Alex Raymond original artwork published in LOOK Magazine October 20, 1942 envisioning ""how peace will come after war"". Accomplished in pencil on 20 x 28 in. illustration board. As captioned in the magazine: ""Alex Raymond, creator of Flash Gordon, pictures how peace will come after war. In this painting, which represents Raymond's more serious work, he suggests that a new civilization, holding the torch of freedom, will be raised up from the war ruins by the hands of the soldiers and civilians who have lost their lives."" The art depicts nude male and female figures (unquestionably renderings of Flash Gordon and Dale Arden) supported by a conglomeration of interlocking hands piercing through the dark clouds showing a war-torn landscape below. Above and behind lighter clouds is a ""cloud city"" - exactly as depicted in Raymond's Flash Gordon comic strip! On the bottom margin is handwritten in pencil, ""Cartoon for painting for Look Magazine"" with a ""50%"" written in the bottom right corner. The LOOK Magazine article, entitled, ""The Creator of Flash Gordon Envisions the War's End / Alex Raymond, who draws the famous strip, thinks superscience will win for us."" An excerpt from the article: ""Raymond had been drawing Flash for nine years. The strip has scores of imitators. But Raymond's work is considered unique, first, because the drawing is so good, second, because Raymond makes Flash's superscientific adventures seem entirely plausible. Raymond believes many of them are. While he was doing Flash, science began to fascinate him. In these pages, dealing with a truly serious subject, he retains his imaginative approach, picturing superscientific crafts that might, conceivably, win the war."" Raymond's first Flash Gordon strip debuted on January 7, 1934, introducing the handsome ""Flash Gordon, Yale graduate and world-renowned polo player"" and his lovely companion, Dale Arden, who parachute out of a crashing plane and are Shanghaied by Dr. Hans Zarkov aboard his rocket ship, launched to intercept the threatening planet Mongo as it hurtles toward Earth. Thus began the fantastical space opera that, by the late 1930s, was published in 130 newspapers across the globe, translated into eight languages, and read by over 50 million people. A wonderful war-date drawing reflecting Alex Raymond's idealized vision of future peace with his on-the-nose homage to Flash Gordon, his greatest creation. Light scattered spotting along margins with mounting tape on verso. $10,000 - $15,000