6 original art sketches and studies by Disney artist Eric Robison have been added to his gallery. All rendered in black marker on sturdy board and professionally framed and matted. Check them out while supplies last.
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Few Disney stories capture the spirit of adventure quite like Don Donald, and now collectors have a rare opportunity to acquire an original artwork by acclaimed Disney artist Tom Wood.
Inspired by Donald Duck’s first starring role, this charming original drawing celebrates one of the most iconic characters in Disney history with all the humor, energy, and personality that have made Donald a beloved favorite for generations. Tom Wood’s clean linework and deep appreciation for Disney’s classic heritage shine through in every detail, making this a wonderful piece for both seasoned collectors and passionate Disney fans.
Discover the artwork and view additional images by clicking here.
A true collector’s treasure has arrived! ✨
Now available: the rare Carl Barks bronze figure Who’s Out There? — a stunning limited edition piece featuring Scrooge McDuck on high alert. This example is #102/131 and comes complete with its original Certificate of Authenticity.
Highly sought after, rarely offered, and an absolute must for serious Carl Barks and Disney collectors.
For only the second time ever, Eric Robison has signed a set of his 100 Mickeys mini lithos released back in 2002. Each of these lithographs features one of the one hundre Mickeys painted by Eric Robison to commemorate Walt Disney’s 100th anniversary. These lithos were originally released unsigned so this is a rare opportunity indeed to add thes special collectibles to your collection. The first time, we offered these signed lithos, they were quick to sell out. And remember: we only have 1 of each of these Mickey lithos in stock! The prices of these lithographic beauties range from €70.00 – €135.00. Click HERE to check out our current inventory and secure one or more of these rare gems today.
Calling all fans of Pluto, Goofy and the beautiful golden age Disney art of Tom Wood! 2 new fine art giclées featuring the art by this great Disney legend are now in stock.
Now there is a renewed reason to browse our selection of original Disney animation art as we have just added several drawings to our selection.
There is a kind of devotion that doesn’t announce itself.
It doesn’t speak in vows or ceremonies. It doesn’t gather witnesses. It doesn’t ask to be understood.
It simply remains.
In Till Death Do Us Part, Carl Barks gives us that kind of devotion—not between two people, but between a figure and something far less forgiving: gold.
The Companion That Never Leaves
Scrooge McDuck stands beside a sack of gold dust, the bag seated almost ceremonially on a chair. It is not clutter. It is not background. It occupies the space like a presence—like something that belongs there.
Like something that has always been there.
Through the window behind him, the Klondike stretches outward—a memory rendered in distance. The place where everything began. The origin of the obsession, or perhaps the justification for it.
Scrooge does not look triumphant.
He looks… settled.
And that’s where the piece becomes unsettling.
A Different Kind of Marriage
The title, Till Death Do Us Part, frames the entire scene in a way that feels almost too precise.
Because what we are looking at is not wealth.
It is commitment.
The gold dust is positioned like a partner—elevated, attended, quietly central. The chair gives it status. The proximity gives it intimacy. And Scrooge’s stillness suggests something deeper than ownership.
Attachment.
This is not about greed in the simple sense. Greed is loud, impulsive, chaotic.
This is something quieter.
Something that has lasted.
The Distance of the Klondike
The Klondike, visible through the window, is not just scenery. It is context—almost like a memory Scrooge cannot quite leave behind.
It represents effort, hardship, transformation. The place where gold was not just wealth, but survival. Where every grain carried meaning.
But now, separated by glass, it feels distant.
Contained.
The question begins to form:
Did the Klondike create the bond—or trap him inside it?
Stillness as Revelation
There is no motion in this image. No narrative unfolding.
Just a moment held in suspension.
And in that stillness, something becomes clear: this is not a beginning, and it is not an end. It is the middle of something that has already lasted too long to question easily.
Scrooge is not reaching for the gold.
He doesn’t need to.
That’s what makes it permanent.
What the Title Really Means
“Till death do us part” suggests an ending imposed from the outside—something inevitable, something final.
But here, it feels less like a limit and more like a certainty.
Because nothing in the image suggests separation.
Only continuation.
Only endurance.
The gold will remain. Scrooge will remain. And the space between them—carefully arranged, quietly reverent—will not change unless something forces it to.
The Weight of Staying
Barks does something subtle here.
He removes the noise we usually associate with Scrooge—the adventures, the schemes, the movement—and leaves only the relationship.
Stripped down, it becomes harder to dismiss.
Harder to laugh at.
Because what remains is something familiar: the way people hold onto things that define them, even when those things stop evolving.
Even when they stop giving anything back.
Why It Lingers
This lithograph doesn’t resolve itself.
It doesn’t condemn Scrooge, and it doesn’t celebrate him.
It simply shows him—standing beside what matters most, with the past behind him and nothing in front of him but continuation.
And maybe that’s the quiet discomfort of it.
Not that he loves gold.
But that the love no longer changes.
That it has settled into something permanent.
Something that, like the title suggests, will only end when he does.
Edition details:
Released in 1983
24” x 20” (60 x 50 cm)
Editions:
495 Regular Edition
1 bon-a-tirer trial proof
100 Gold Plate Edition*
6 AP
15 PP
*This was the first lithograph to also be released as a Gold Plate Edition. However, it was embossed only with the gold emblem and thus does not feature the characteristic gold border.
Our current selection of this beautiful and resonating lithograph encompasses a professionally framed Regular Edition litho and another Regular Edition housed in the rare, original Disney licensed frame.
Introducing our brand new, limited-edition Bank of Duckburg coin series featuring the art of Carl Barks.