Alex Toth art price guide
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Record Sale for Artwork:
$12,600 Zorro Volume #1 Cover Art
Official Website:
http://www.tothfans.com/secdetail.php?c=14
Key Comic Book Issues:
Usually several thousand dollars for quality work by Alex Toth.
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Zorro Volume #1 Cover Art sold for $12,600
Alex Toth
Batgirl & Supergirl Underoos Illustration sold for $5,020
Alex Toth
Big Daddy Roth #3 5-Page Story sold for $3,720
Alex Toth
Black Canary Pin-up Illustration sold for $7,770
Alex Toth
Creepy #6 Page 7 sold for $6,600
Alex Toth
Creepy #32 Page 5 sold for $7,770
Alex Toth
Creepy #75 Page 2 sold for $2,640
Alex Toth
DC & Marvel Underoos Illustration sold for $6,570
Alex Toth
Eerie #2 Partial Story sold for $3,820
Alex Toth
Eerie #64 Page 3 sold for $3,360
Alex Toth
Four Colour #845 'The Land of the Unknown' Story Page 14 sold for $3,840
Alex Toth
House of Secrets #123 Page 11 sold for $5,040
Alex Toth art
Intimate love #21 Page 3 sold for $350
Alex Toth
Nightmare Unpublished Story sold for $5,280
Alex Toth
Popular Romance #22 10-Page Story sold for $7,170
Alex Toth
Rip Hunter…Time Master #6 Page 7 sold for $8,370
Alex Toth
Spider-Man Underoos Ilustration sold for $3,110
Alex Toth
Superman Annual #12 Page 3-4 sold for $9,000
Alex Toth
The Unseen #6 1-Page Story sold for $4,560
Alex Toth
Unnamed Illustration sold for $7,200
Alex Toth
Witzend #10 Partial Story sold for $4,925
Alex Toth
Wonder Woman Underoos Illustration sold for $3,700
Alex Toth
World's Finest Comics #66 Page 5 sold for $4,800
Alex Toth
X-Men #12 Page 13 sold for $8,365
Alex Toth
Alex Toth graduated from the School of Industrial Art in Manhattan in 1947. He was hired later that same year by Sheldon Mayer of DC Comics to provide artwork for issue #28 of Green Lantern.
Following the success of his first assignment, Toth then began drawing for All-Star Comics. He drew four issues initially, including issues #38 and #41 wherein the Justice Society of America first meets the Black Canary and then eventually joining the team.
Toth continued working for DC over the next five years, during the Golden Age of the industry, providing versions of Doctor Mid-Nite, the Atom and the Flash. Toth also drew outside of the super hero genre, drawing for Western titles as well like All-Star Western.
DC editor Julius Schwartz called Toth "my best artist at the time" and gave him many sought-after characters and assignments to draw. In 1952, Toth and writer Robert Kanigher co-created Rex the Wonder Dog, a very popular character of the era.
By the end of 1952, Toth's contract had expired and he left DC and moved to California and took a job with Standard Comics. He left the superhero genre to focus more on romance, crime and suspense and war themed comics.
Toth was drafted by the U.S. Army in 1954 and stationed in Tokyo, Japan. While there, Toth wrote and drew his own adventure comic strip for the Depot Diary, his base's paper. The regular strip featured Toth's character Jon Fury.
Toth returned home from overseas in 1954 and settled again in California, this time working for Dell Comics until 1960. Following his stint there, Toth moved into working on animated series for television and was hired by Hanna-Barbera working as the art director on series like Space Ghost, The Herculoids, Birdman and the Galaxy Trio and others.
He continued to contribute artwork for various comics and publishers throughout the 1970s, like Creepy and Eerie for Warren Publishing.
In 1981, Toth was the recipient of an Inkpot Award at the San Diego Comic Con and was inducted into the Jack Kirby Hall of Fame in 1990.
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