"Dude for a Day"
Fine Art Porcelain Figurine
by Carl Barks
Noontime on a busy
street in Duckburg.
Bankers and secretaries scurry past, trying to make the most of their
lunch hour.
Donald Duck has just picked up his new tweed jacket and bullied cousin
Gladstone out of the loan of a walking stick.
He stops at the florist's for a bouquet and a boutonniere: "Give me one
of everything!" he snaps.
On the way out, he bumps into one of his nephews lugging a shoeshine kit.
Don checks his watch. There's time for a quick buff on the way to
Daisy's.
A simple scene, but it shows us
ourselves.
The hopes and dreams that come piling into Donald's life are our hopes
and dreams,
so that even a downtown street corner can be touched for a moment with
magic.
This has made the duck one of the world's most beloved cartoon
characters.
Over the years, many artists
have illustrated Donald's adventures in films and children's books.
None is more respected or collectible than Carl Barks,
a veteran cartoonist who left Walt Disney's animation studio in 1942 to
work on comic books.
For twenty-five years, Barks wrote and drew over 500 stories featuring
Donald, Uncle Scrooge, and their lovable, eccentric kin.
Because his work was published anonymously, he came to be known simply
as the Good Artist. People still call him that.
In his nineties, Barks began a
new career: creating porcelain sculptures that capture the charm of his
comic book ducks.
Dude for a Day is based on a painting he made in 1975,
nine years after he retired from comics and moved into the fine art
market.
There Barks produced more than a hundred paintings, quickly becoming a
cult phenomenon.
Today his oils and acrylics hang in the homes of a fortunate few.
If a Barks painting came up at auction, it would take a healthy chunk of
money to buy it.
This does not mean that his art
is beyond reach.
With the advent of the Carl Barks Figurines, collectors will have the
chance to acquire their own Barks duck,
cast in bone china and signed in the last firing by the artist himself.
Dude for a Day is the second in a projected series of
ten figures, each to be issued in an edition limited to 100 numbered
pieces.
Barks designed this jaunty pose
of Donald and nephew Huey through a series of drawings based on his
painting.
It was a daunting task. As the artist put it,
"Those quacking characters whom I had always thought of as simple
two-dimensional cartoon folk,
with no more substance than ink stains on piece of flat paper, were now
to be sculpted figures with thickness and height and weight.”
The whole image had to be conceived afresh, and from every angle. Then
there was the matter of sculpting it.
He entrusted production to
Connoisseur Ltd, a British studio
whose porcelain artworks grace Buckingham Palace and the White House.
For weeks Connoisseur's craftsmen worked closely with Barks to bring his
sketches to life in three dimensions.
Because the studio specializes in floral pieces,
its sculptors took great pride in researching Donald's bouquet and
rendering the cartoon blossoms as real flowers.
Next the sculpture went through an elaborate process of casting,
assembly, firing, and decoration.
Since all flower petals were shaped and assembled by hand, each figurine
an original creation.
You can almost inhale the
bouquet's fragrance and feel the sporty swing of Donald's cane (forged
in bronze for strength).
To give the sculpture an extra touch of class, Connoisseur placed a
zircon "in Donald's stickpin-a jewel noted for its brilliance and
clarity.
This duck is ready for the date of a lifetime!
Hand-painted, adorned with a
gemstone, signed in gold, and mounted on a custom cherry wood base, Dude
for a Day is an artwork to treasure.
So that you may savor the full creative process behind it,
each sculpture comes with a 36-page book containing insightful essays
and photographs of the artist.
There's even an interview with Barks and a preface specially written by
him.
Your copy will be numbered to match the figurine's edition number, with
a certificate of authenticity bound in at the back.
As the crowning touch, each
figure of Donald is paired with a signed and numbered lithograph of the
painting that inspired it.
The print comes from a preliminary run of only 100 copies,
framed in cherry wood to match the sculpture's base and protected by
archival glass that incorporates ultraviolet shielding.
These custom features are available only to purchasers of the figurine.
Most important, however, is the
artistry of Barks himself. As he modestly put it,
"I'm just a cartoonist, but I was the guy who originated each pose and
got all that feeling into the duck.
That's what they capture in the figurine. My original vision is in each
one.”
And that's what you'll be getting.
Dude For a Day
will never again be produced as a figurine
and all studio molds have been destroyed or defaced upon completion of
this limited edition.
This figurine was licensed to The Bruce Hamilton Company by the Walt
Disney Company
to be released under the imprint of Another Rainbow, Inc."
PLEASE NOTE:
Although the edition was originally limited to 100 pieces…..there are,
in actuality, only 74 in
existence!
There were also 3 Artist's
Proofs created.
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