Modesty Blaise daily strip 5584a (Original)

Modesty Blaise daily strip 5584a art by Neville Colvin

Modesty Blaise daily strip 5584a (Original)


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Artist: Neville Colvin
Medium: Pen & Ink on Board
Size: 20" x 7" (520mm x 180mm)
Date: 1982
Code: Colvin5584a

This is the unique original Pen & Ink drawing by Neville Colvin.

This is the original art used for an episode of 'The Balloonatic', the 51st Modesty Blaise adventure, and appeared in the London Evening Standard in 1982.

This comes directly from the Neville Colvin family archive.

Modesty Blaise was Peter O'Donnell's most famous literary creation and has appeared in many popular novels and newspaper strips for nearly 40 years.
  • Artist Biography
    Neville Maurice Colvin (17 December 1918 - 1991; New Zealand & UK)
    Neville Colvin was born in New Zealand and began his career as a cartoonist in 1936 working for the Wellington Evening Post doing political and sports cartoons for a decade.

    In 1946, facing political censorship, he left New Zealand and moved his family to London where he continued his cartooning career, primarily drawing sports and political cartoons for the News Chronicle, Daily Telegraph, Daily Express and Evening Standard until the mid-1950s.

    He then decided to expand his scope to serialized newspaper strips drawing Ginger & Co. for Swift Weekly from 1960-62.

    Colvin briefly drew the James Bond strip 1976-77, providing an ending to the story 'Ape of Diamonds' for syndication whilst author Jim Lawrence and artist Yaroslav Horak concentrated on a new series for the Sunday Express. Colvin drew episodes 3384-3437 for the Daily Express, the strip ending on 22 January 1977.

    Between 1977 and 1980, Colvin worked on a number of projects, including a Sunday strip featuring Modesty Blaise written by Peter O'Donnell, but the idea was dropped after Colvin had drawn seven episodes. Colvin subsequently replaced Romero on the daily strip on 27 May 1980 with the story 'Dossier on Pluto'.

    He went on to draw 1,902 episodes - only slightly fewer than Jim Holdaway, the first artist on the Modesty Blaise strip- and his last strip appearing on 15 September 1986. One story, 'The Scarlet Maiden' (published in 1982), was the completion of the Sunday strip tryout from some years earlier.

    Neville Colvin died in Camden, London, in 1991.
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£0.00
£200.00
In Stock