Frank Quitely art price guide
See prices for Frank Quitely artwork, and have your original comic art appraised FREE by us.
Record Sale for Artwork:
$10,200 Flex Mantello #2 Cover Art
Official Website:
https://imagecomics.com/creators/frank-quitely
Key Comic Book Issues:
Published Quitely art sells for several hundred to several thousand dollars, with a few pieces breaking into five figures.
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Flex Mantello #2 Cover Art sold for $10,200
Frank Quitely
Batman #75 Sketch Variant Cover Art sold for $2,040
Frank Quitely
Batman and Robin #10 Cover Art sold for $9,560
Frank Quitely
Batman Scottish Connection Page 32 sold for $1,135
Frank Quitely
Dark Horse Presents #91 Page 1 sold for $510
Frank Quitely
Dark Horse Presents #92 Page 8 sold for $320
Frank Quitely
Flex Mantello #1 Page 7 sold for $1,015
Frank Quitely
Green Lantern #60 DC 75th Anniversary Variant Cover Art sold for $10,200
Frank Quitely
World's Greatest Creators Honour the World's Greatest Heroes 9/11 Illustration sold for $900
Frank Quitely
JLA: Earth 2 Page 8 sold for $780
Frank Quitely
JLA: Earth 2 Page 32 sold for $7,200
Frank Quitely
Dark Horse Presents #92 Page 1 sold for $480
Frank Quitely
New X-Men #114 Page 6 sold for $250
Frank Quitely
New X-Men #126 Page 27 sold for $3,120
Frank Quitely art
The Authority #17 Cover Art sold for $720
Frank Quitely
The Authority #20 Page 18 sold for $310
Frank Quitely
The Invisibles Volume 3 #1 Page 11 sold for $3,840
Frank Quitely
All-Star Superman #4 Page 20 sold for $6,600
Frank Quitely art
All-Star Superman #6 Page 12 sold for $2,270
Frank Quitely
Batman and Robin #1 Page 22 sold for $2,040
Frank Quitely
Dark Horse Presents #93 Page 2 sold for $530
Frank Quitely
New X-Men #137 Page 11 sold for $1,440
Frank Quitely art
Spider-Man DVD Boxset Illustration sold for $1,135
Frank Quitely
The Authority #22 Page 20 sold for $1,440
Frank Quitely art
Frank Quitely is the pseudonym of Vincent Deighan, which he worked under for much of his career, initially to hide his work from his parents whom he worried might find it upsetting.
Quitely began working in the industry while still in his native city of Glasgow, providing artwork for Electric Soup, an underground comic book in 1990. The comic book gained popularity over time and was eventually distributed across the UK.
This helped Quitely garner the attention of other editors such as David Bishop, editor of Judge Dredd Magazine who began giving the young artist assignments. Quitely worked on Shimura, written by Robbie Morrison and Missionary Man by Gordon Rennie. From there, he went to work for Dark Horse Presents and Dark Horse Comics.
In 1996 he gained popularity in America for his work on Flex Mentallo, a spin-off from the Doom Patrol series. Quitely also drew various cover art for DC Comics before publishing his fist full length graphic novel, written by Alan Grant, Batman: The Scottish Connection.
In 2000, Quitely took over the drawing duties of Bryan Hitch for the series The Authority, written by Mark Millar, before he left that position in order to draw the New X-Men.
In 2004, he signed a two year contract with DC Comics, drawing for the twelve-issue All-Star Superman series. Following the success of All-Star Superman, Quitely drew for the Batman and Robin series.
Quitely has won numerous awards over his career such as a Best Artist Harvey Award and Best New Series Eisner Award for All-Star Superman, and a Best Artist in Comics Today Award from National Comics.
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