News | June 27, 2023

Frank Frazetta’s $6m Dark Kingdom Becomes World’s Most Valuable Work of Comic or Fantasy Art

Heritage Auctions

Frank Frazetta's Dark Kingdom painting 

The four-day Heritage Auctions Comics & Comic Art auctions was capped by Frank Frazetta's Dark Kingdom, which sold for $6 million to become the world's most valuable comic or fantasy art.

Frazetta's painting graced the covers of Karl Edward Wagner's 1976 novel Dark Crusade and Molly Hatchet's 1979 Flirtin' With Disaster and was one of the late artist's most treasured works. Additionally, the preliminary watercolor sketch that eventually grew into the iconic At the Earth's Core, which appeared on the 1974 cover of the Edgar Rice Burroughs paperback, realized $52,800.

Elsewhere, a signed strip from Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes from March 28, 1986 (Calvin and Hobbes don sunglasses to look "cooler than we are") sold for $174,000, making it the world's most valuable black-and-white Calvin and Hobbes daily. Not far behind was the black-and-white daily that appeared in newspapers on December 30, 1987 (Calvin and Hobbes build "the strongest snow fort ever made" directly behind the garage, much to Dad's dismay), inscribed  to someone named Ann: "Best wishes with your ‘little Calvin". This sold for $156,000.

Calvin and Hobbes strip
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Heritage Auctions

Calvin and Hobbes strip

Calvin and Hobbes strip
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Heritage Auctions

Calvin and Hobbes strip

Joe Simon and Jack Kirby Captain America Comics 5 Splash Page
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Heritage Auctions

Joe Simon and Jack Kirby Captain America Comics 5 Splash Page

Other highlights included:

* a Richie Rich No. 1 sold for $108,000 to set a new record for the coveted 1960 Alfred Harvey title

* a Jack Kirby-Joe Simon splash page from the fifth issue of Captain America Comics - the opening page of the story The Terror That Was Devil's Island - went for $252,000

* five pages from The Man Who Broke Batman's Back from Bane's creator Graham Nolan in 1993's Batman: Vengeance of Bane No. 1 sold for a combined $300,240 

* the Bill Sienkiewicz page from 1985's The New Mutants No. 25 that introduced the mutant son of Professor X and Gabrielle Haller known as Legion sold for $93,000.