About the item: 

From the George Pérez Collection... This hand-made Wonder Woman figure stands approximately 6 inches tall when assembled - it is now disassembled but the photos show it both together and disassembled).  It appears to be made of metal and can easily come apart in transport, which is why it will be shipped disassembled.  But it can easily be reassembled with glue which is how it appears it was originally put together.  One can clearly see it is from pre-fabricated parts designed to be glued together and is not actually broken (though what the figure was before it was turned it into Wonder Woman I cannot tell). Made by a fan and presented as a gift to the artist, it was prominently displayed in Mr. Pérez's home studio alongside many other personal mementos from his career.  This item is from the personal collection of Mr. Pérez and includes a certificate of authenticity from Vault Collectibles (dba as empire.auctions).  No refunds, exchanges, or returns for either domestic or international buyers. Please see below for more information about Mr. Pérez and his collection.

The George Pérez Collection


Vault Collectibles is honored to bring George Pérez’s personal collection to and to share his tremendous legacy with his countless fans and collectors.

The Collection includes hundreds of items from Mr. Pérez's estate; items the artist kept over the years and stored/displayed in his studio.  Many of the comics are graded and certified by the comic industry's preeminent grading service, Comics Guaranty Company (CGC).  All non-CGC graded items will include a Vault Collectibles Certificate of Authenticity (including some raw comic books as well as graphic novels, magazines, and posters, plus unique items such industry recognition awards and even some hand-made gifts Mr. Pérez received from fans, all of which come from the artist's studio and were proudly displayed there by Mr. Pérez.

Fans will have a wide variety to choose from in these auctions and will see not only the depth and scope of Mr. Pérez's contributions to the unique art form of comics but his tremendous accomplishments in the field as well. 


About George Pérez


George Pérez’s amazing career spans five decades, beginning in 1974 with a 2-page spread in Astonishing Tales #25. Since that time he helped revolutionize and revitalize several characters and titles, including The New Teen Titans (also co-creating several of the new members with writer Marv Wolfman), Wonder WomanThe Avengers, and the entire DC Universe itself in the landmark Crisis on Infinite Earths series (again with Wolfman) and its companion piece, the History of the DC Universe.  More recently, he again helped redefine DC through Infinite Crisis and the relaunch of Superman under DC’s New 52. 

In addition to ground-breaking events, Pérez has provided fantastic work for many other titles including The Justice League of America, The Infinity Gauntlet, The Hulk: Future Imperfect, Batman, The X-Men, Superman, The Fantastic Four, and the personal dream project JLA/Avengers that brought together DC and Marvel’s preeminent super teams. Many of his contributions have made it onto the silver screen, including strong influences on DC’s Wonder Woman films (indeed, Pérez's Wonder Woman work was the very basis of the first film) and in Marvel’s cinematic universe (Pérez's influence can be seen in everything from the gauntlet ‘snap’ - which Pérez first illustrated - to the main Age of Ultron fight scene which was specifically based on Perez’s artwork).  

A true humanitarian as well, Pérez helped raise funds for numerous charities over the course of his career and also co-founded A.C.T.O.R. (now known as the Hero Initiative), the first federally recognized not-for-profit organization dedicated to helping comic book creators in need.    

Recognized by industry professionals as well as fans, Pérez has won multiple awards and honors, including several Eagle Awards (one along with Jim Shooter, Sal Buscema, and David Wenzel) for Best Continued Story on The Avengers, one for Best Cover for Avengers #185, and one for Favorite Artist (penciler) in 1986. He won the Inkpot Award in 1983 and his work along with Wolfman on Crisis on Infinite Earths won the 1985 and 1986 Jack Kirby Awards for Best Finite Series. He has also won numerous Comic Buyer’s Guide Fan Awards. In 1985, Pérez was included as an honoree among the most influential contributors to DC Comics’ history in the company’s 50th-anniversary publication Fifty Who Made DC Great.  Most recently, Pérez received the Inkwell Awards Stacey Aragon Special Recognition Award for his lifetime achievement in inking.