DR. BELL'S MONSTER — The Mechanical Nervous System
Category|Art & Tech
Subcategory|Technical Drawings
Year|1976
Rarity Class|CLASS B
Condition|Excellent
Last updated: 09 Mar 2026
Historical Context
Key Figure & Artist: This feature was authored by Craig Karpel and illustrated by the legendary Gray Morrow, a master of the comic book and pulp illustration world. The piece references Alexander Graham Bell (Dr. Bell) as the progenitor of a modern "monster" dominating humanity.
History & Significance: Created in 1976 to mark the centenary of the telephone's invention. It presents a provocative critique, asking if technology has become the "nervous system of the noosphere," controlling mankind rather than serving it.
Editorial Strategy: Utilizing Sci-Fi Horror imagery as a form of techno-criticism within high-end editorial magazines. This approach targeted intellectual readers, challenging the blind optimism surrounding industrial progress during the mid-70s.
Technical Craftsmanship: Gray Morrow employs dynamic, comic-style linework. The centerpiece is a towering automaton built from analog telephone parts, featuring a rotary dial chest and handset limbs. The dramatic low-angle perspective emphasizes the overwhelming and terrifying power of technology.
Global Market Value & Future Potential: As pre-2000 print media naturally decays and vanishes forever, original pages in fine condition featuring Morrow's art are projected to surge 200% - 400% in value. These survivors are transitioning into rare "Analog Artifacts".