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Collector Offers To Pay $100,000 For Original Contra Box Art https://tinyurl.com/yd3uol7l While video game collecting is a popular hobby, video game art collecting is a more rarefied avocation. That’s probably because there are so few pieces to go around. There are thousands of copies of Battletoads In Battlemaniacs for the Super Nintendo, but only one original painting of its box artwork— and that’s owned by Dan, a 42-year-old accountant from Vancouver, British Columbia who’s been hunting down original game art for the last decade. Recently, he posted a massive bounty for one of his holy grails—he’ll pay $100,000 for the original box art used on the NES game Contra. Yep, that’s five zeroes. In an age before high-res digital art and Photoshop, the covers of game boxes were painted by hand and photographed for the box cover. The paintings had to be done larger than the final product, so the original art is usually around 18 by 24 inches, with larger examples going up to about 20 by 30 inches in size. Dan, who asked Kotaku not to use his last name over privacy concerns, began as a garden-variety game collector, at one point amassing a near-complete set of games for the Nintendo Entertainment System that were still sealed in the original shrinkwrap. That all changed, he said, when he bought his first pieces of art. “At the time, it was thirty five hundred bucks or something for three pieces, and I’m sitting there thinking, oh my gosh, what have I done,” he said. “I got them in the mail and my jaw hit the floor. I couldn’t believe the detail, and the color, and just how amazing they looked in person.” Soon, he was selling off the jewels of his game collection to pay for more art. In 2014, he traded his sealed copy of the rare NES game Stadium Events, one of the most desired acquisitions among game collectors and which at the time was probably worth about $30,000, in exchange for the original box painting for the obscure Taito game Panic Restaurant. Ten years later, Dan says his collection includes “more than 50" pieces of original game art paintings, which encompasses not only the art from the front covers of boxes but also original art that was used in advertisements, magazine covers, and for other ancillary purposes. Games for which he owns the original box painting include Blades of Steel, Mechanized Attack, and Ren & Stimpy Time Warp. While his collection spans many different genres and publishers, he says his two main passions are games from Konami and Capcom. The current highlight of his collection is the artwork from Capcom’s Super NES game Mega Man 7, which he received in a bulk buy when he purchased 40 pieces of art at once. “The first painting in the first package was Mega Man 7 and I just sat there and stared at it for like half an hour. It was so fucking cool,” he said. “ Really beautifully done, big, 20 by 30, key title, amazing-looking colors, and just oh my god, so awesome.” Most of the challenge of collecting original video game art is just finding out where it is, if it even exists anymore. Today, there’s a little more attention being paid to the artists who created these well-known works: There ’s an upcoming documentary about box art that Dan will appear in, and a fellow collector named Adam Harvey will show off his collection of Capcom box art at a retro gaming expo in Ohio later this year. But when Dan and the few other collectors interested in original art started trying to research it in 2008, there was nothing to go on. Dan says he’s spent the last decade diligently running down “as many leads as humanly possible,” and buying as many pieces as he can afford. Often, those leads end in disappointment, finding out for sure that the original artwork was destroyed. As a Konami fan, Dan wanted to track down the box art for the first Castlevania game, but his research led him to two conclusions— one, the box art was created in Japan; two, it was likely destroyed in the Great Hanshin Earthquake of 1995, which took out Konami’s headquarters. What was not destroyed, he found out, was the box art painting to another major Konami game on the NES: Contra. This was because the art used on the box wasn’t created in Japan, but in Europe, by a British artist named Bob Wakelin. Wakelin did art for the publisher Ocean, which had licensed Contra from Konami for release on European computer formats under the title of Gryzor. It’s Wakelin’s Gryzor art (which, infamously, made heavy use of a still of Arnold Schwarzenegger from Predator for the main character’s pose) that ended up on the cover of the U.S. version of Contra. By the time that Dan tracked down Wakelin, he had “long ago” already sold off the original Contra art. Dan reasoned that meant it likely hadn’t been destroyed. But the artist had no idea who he’d sold it to, and the trail ended there. When Wakelin passed away earlier this year, Dan decided it was time to go public and say, in a post on the Nintendo-Age collecting forums, that he’d be willing to pay $100,000 for the artwork if the buyer were to step forward. (He says would-be sellers should contact him there under the user name “ Bronty.”) “It isn’t necessarily about it being the pinnacle piece for me,” Dan says of the Contra cover. “It’s just one where I know for a fact that at some point somebody somewhere had it… Unless that person who bought it took it and threw it in the garbage can, I have every reason to believe that it’s still out there somewhere.” ==== 簡單來說,早期遊戲盒封面是找人畫好後拍起來再印上去的。 而那個手繪的原畫就是唯一的。 這位收藏家就專門收藏這個,原新聞有秀出他的幾個收藏,有洛克人和音速小子。 他本來也有找到魂斗羅的原畫畫家,但那畫家表示畫己經賣掉了。 所以他現在出來表示願意以10萬美金買下那張魂斗羅遊戲盒子的原畫。希望現在擁有畫的 人願意出手賣他。 -- 「......歡迎大家光臨天象館。」 「這裡有著無論何時都決不會消失的,美麗的無窮光輝。 「滿天的星星們在等待著大家的到來。」 ── 星野夢美 ﹝星之夢﹞ ── -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc), 來自: 1.170.166.50 ※ 文章網址: https://www.ptt.cc/bbs/C_Chat/M.1517627522.A.EA9.html ※ 編輯: wizardfizban (1.170.166.50), 02/03/2018 11:13:20
jeff860109: 這也算古董了吧 02/03 11:21
f222051618: 他確定這原畫還完好沒損壞嗎 XD" 02/03 12:44
iwinlottery: 壞也也是唯一 02/03 13:08