Comic Mart
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Comic_Mart an entity of type: Thing
Comic Mart is the catchall term for a series of British comic book trade fairs which were held in the United Kingdom from 1972 until the early 1990s. The Comic Mart was one of the earliest recurring public comic events in the UK, predated only by the British Comic Art Convention. Comic Mart began in London, eventually expanding to Birmingham, Manchester, and Liverpool, among other locations. The first few Comic Marts were organized and produced by Rob Barrow and Nick Landau; eventually they split up to produce competing versions of the event, and were joined by other regional organizers.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Comic Mart
rdf:langString
Comic Mart
rdf:langString
Comic Mart
xsd:integer
65956980
xsd:integer
1098619595
rdf:langString
United Kingdom
xsd:integer
1972
rdf:langString
Comic books
xsd:integer
1998
rdf:langString
London; offshoots in Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool, and other cities
rdf:langString
Rob Barrow/Fantasy Domain
rdf:langString
Defunct
rdf:langString
Comic Mart: Central Hall Westminster
rdf:langString
Comicbook Marketplace: Lyndhurst Hall, Kentish Town
rdf:langString
Comic Mart is the catchall term for a series of British comic book trade fairs which were held in the United Kingdom from 1972 until the early 1990s. The Comic Mart was one of the earliest recurring public comic events in the UK, predated only by the British Comic Art Convention. Comic Mart began in London, eventually expanding to Birmingham, Manchester, and Liverpool, among other locations. The first few Comic Marts were organized and produced by Rob Barrow and Nick Landau; eventually they split up to produce competing versions of the event, and were joined by other regional organizers. Unlike comic book conventions, which typically featured publishers, creators, panel discussions, and other activities, Comic Marts (which were generally one-day affairs) were primarily organized around dealers selling comics to individual customers. The emphasis tended to be on hard-to-find American comics: Golden Age and Silver Age comics, as well as new titles, which were not distributed to the UK with any regularity in the early 1970s. As the marts became more popular, however, British comics professionals began to congregate and socialize at the shows and afterward in pubs nearby (such as The Westminster Arms).
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
31560