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European Graphic Novels+

  • *Oh? And what fun shall we have today, m'lord?*

    I really enjoyed this mashup of Medi / Ren styles, courtesy of "ColinArcArtPerson."

    Unfortunately, until the problems are fixed here in terms of including images in posts & comments, I'm gonna just leave you with one more pic in this case:

    https://i.imgur.com/mhm9M6k.jpeg

    The artist "Colin" is on Tumblr, for starters: https://www.tumblr.com/colinarcartperson

    0
  • Well, here we are!

    (from Les Schtroumpfs T4, L’œuf et les Schtroumpfs)

    TAGS: Schtroumpf, Smurf, Peyo

    2
  • ***Ballade contre les ennemis*** (Moebius, 1995) [NSFW]

    Full title: Ballad against the enemies of France.

    One of 18 illustrations he did for Ballades, a book of poems by François Villon. This immediately stood out to me because I've seen so little of Moebius' watercolor & marker work like this.

    In fact the pieces as a whole distinctly remind me of major arcana tarot cards. (hmm, I wonder if anyone's had the chutzpah to try arranging such a deck out of his art?)

    You can see more of these at the bottom: https://www.vagabond-des-etoiles.com/arts/ballades-de-francois-villon-moebius/

    4
  • Splash page from ***Alef-Thau***, by "Arno"

    This comes from a fun, rollicking, 8-tome adventure series scripted by Alejandro Jodorowsky. The premise involves a boy born without arms & legs but with a fierce willpower, who finds ways to reverse some of his infirmities by going on various quests, which also tend to involve the fate of his very world. It's not as dark as some of Jodo's other stuff, reminding me more of the Arzach series.

    Tragically, the artist (Arnaud Dombre) lost his life around the time the last book was being finished up, which was turned in to a rather fascinating memorial to him in the final pages, the likes of which I've never seen before. Some 'Blackadder & co. making their final push' type of energy, if that rings any bells.

    A bit more on Arno here: https://www.lambiek.net/artists/a/arno.htm

    And on the complete series: (translate alert) https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Les_Aventures_d%27Alef-Thau

    5
  • Doomed Tenotchtitlan (Dufaux & Xavier)

    This comes from the Conquistador series. As a huuuge Jean Dufaux fan, I'm embarrassed to say that so far I haven't gotten to it yet. :S

    Still, tho: > Since their landing in America, Hernán Cortés and his army have been considered deities by the Aztec emperor Moctezuma. Unfortunately, Cortés has been working more for himself than for the distant crown of Spain for some time. > > While he mounts a punitive expedition designed to remind others of their allegiance to him, Cortés also sends a motley group, mixing soldiers and mercenaries, to steal Moctezuma's priceless treasures. > > That group of adventurers will soon be decimated by a mysterious entity which relentlessly pursues them in the jungle. > > Are the enemy creatures mythical in nature, or simply human killers bent on vengeance? Perhaps one should not attack the ancestral and powerful Aztec legends with impunity… --BDT and Johnny

    There are 4 tomes in all, listed & summarized here: https://www.bedetheque.com/serie-32722-BD-Conquistador-Dufaux-Xavier.html

    0
  • *"I leave you in the capable hands of Christina"* -- first thoughts on reading ***Melo Pop*** (Lucie Durbiano)

    So my French is still very much a WIP, but regardless, I really enjoyed this tome. I found it light-hearted in style, but with a good amount of emotional punch, possessing an interesting slice-of-life storytelling style.

    Yeah, there were lots of obvious similarities with Lewis Trondheim's classic McConey / Lapine series, but Durbiano has her own way of telling these tales, not so much alongside Trondheim's humorous-nihilist approach. (hah)

    In terms of the story, we start with a minor "rock oldies" band that's been engaged to play nightly on a cruise ship.

    ! https://i.imgur.com/GNf3RO2.jpeg

    Fun little tableau-style scene there. And now an entire page, by golly:

    ! https://i.imgur.com/qFJtaRn.jpeg

    Pretty funny. The group's manager is arguing with "Mick," the singer / lead guitarist about the band's one and only groupie. One who was tacitly invited to come along on the cruise, and naturally, she has an enormous crush on the laddie. Poor, poor inconvenienced Mick. XD

    ! https://i.imgur.com/U9K5c71.jpeg

    > WHAT were you saying just now? Huh, what, huh?

    SIDE NOTE: One of the things which routinely blows my mind as someone who usually can't stand anthropomorphised animal comics is when I barely even notice that such was the case.

    Eh, actually I found it completely charming here, serving well alongside such masterpieces as District 14 et Grandeville. TBF, if I can offer up any particular critique here, it's that the book can be ever-so-slightly "soap-operish" in nature. Still tho, it never seemed to wallow in such, as they commonly do.

    Oh, and here's some more on this laudable comics gal: https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/durbiano_lucie.htm

    EDIT: For anyone curious, we're still having a "suspicious glitch" when trying to post images in text. Still working on it...

    0
  • *No no, the car works just fine. I'm telling you I'll BE there!!*

    It's Simon Stålenhag again.

    Earlier post on him: https://lemm.ee/post/30828607

    6
  • *Jack Spriggins and the Enchanted Bean*, by Scott Gustafson

    This English story dates to 1734, and was of course later known as Jack and the Beanstalk. But get this-- the story actually seems to have proto-IndoEuropean origins, dating as far back as 4,500 BC(!)

    WP has a solid article on this stuff here.

    As for the artist: > Scott... is primarily known for his work illustrating children’s classics such as Peter Pan, The Night Before Christmas, and the more recent titles, Classic Fairy Tales, Favorite Nursery Rhymes from Mother Goose, Classic Bedtime Stories, and his novel for young readers, Eddie: The Lost Youth of Edgar Allan Poe, which he wrote and illustrated.

    More of his work on "Jack" is here and some of his fairy-tale works are there, which also link to his overall art portfolio.

    Style-wise and theme-wise I find some similarities to the work of Kit Williams, who I briefly covered in a post here from six months ago: https://lemm.ee/post/16931863

    0
  • Daggit... now why am *I* always the one who says "I love you" too early?

    Is too much texte, maybe...!? Lewis OfMan

    https://i.imgur.com/OWwp3Qz.jpg

    https://lemm.ee/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fi.imgur.com%2FOWwp3Qz.jpg

    !

    0
  • *Nävis profite d'un moment avec sa petite amie* [NSFW?]

    So this is Nävis ("NAY-vee") from my favorite long-form sci-fi series Sillage ("Wake"). It's about a human girl who was the only survivor of an interstellar ship crash, who grew to adulthood with the help of one surviving robot and a sort of orphaned tiger-cub who grew up alongside her.

    Eventually, she's discovered by the travelling collective "Sillage," which immediately turns her life upside down, but unexpectedly she proves uniquely valuable to the collective-- her human mind simply can't be read by the best telepaths in the galaxy, making her primo material as an espionage agent, particularly since she grew up in fairly savage circumstances. It's all a bit of a super-creative riff on the classic Tarzan formula, I find.

    More on the wonderful Sillage / Wake albums: https://sillage.fandom.com/wiki/Sillage_(comic_series)

    Side note: I get the feeling that her bird friend here doubles as a little homage to John diFool's Deepo!

    NOTE ALSO: I've been having some pretty weird problems posting here since I publicly critiqued Lemmy.ML the other day. Let's assume it's just a total coincidence for now, but at the moment, it looks like I'm not allowed to share extra images in the body of my posts.

    7
  • Do you make art? Care to share any? For my part, here's a page from my sketchbook: [NSFW, possibly]

    This page comes from a couple years ago.

    So-- clockwise from L, we have my unfinished attempts at the letter "E," from an illuminated manuscript, one of the industrial fans from my apt-building rooftop, an inflatable cactus creature, and a doodle-space that a couple kids filled in at the local cantina.

    At this point I'd switched from watercolor / gouache to straight-up watercolor pencils, mainly due to ease-of-use and declining health. In theory I found watercolor pencils a generally wonderful idea, but one fraught with complications and hardships, such as the reality that, daggit... the color markings one makes with the pencils really want to stay RIGHT where they are despite all the coaxing in the world from wet brush-strokes. Bah...

    Still, I'm naught but a noobie when it comes to watercolor pencils, so please do take that as a grain de sel.

    The last quarter-sketch (the one the kids did) embarrasses me a little bit and makes me laugh, both. Indeed, if I ever publish my 'great non-fiction' bookend, I'm planning on naming it Faces and Phalluses, directly in reference to the super-amazing ability of the human brain to recognise faces and reproductive organs in almost any possible chaos of an image.

    0
  • Neo-Art-Nouveau Girl by ***X***

    I love this mashup of styles, in which I'm seeing both Mucha, ancient art, ancient architecture and Jordans on the feet!

    My only frustration is that try as I might, I haven't been able to find the original artist. Using reverse-image searches I've been able to come up with a couple names, like "Ely Ferreras," "Samuel Huynh," and others, but so far it seems like maybe they were just people who shared the art on their social media streams. Or maybe "Ely Ferreras" is actually the name of the subject / piece?

    Bahhhh, I don't know. Anyway, you'll get a gold star from me if you can definitively solve the mystery via your internet sleuthing skills. 😀

    7
  • TEMP DELETE: *The Minoan-inspired Mediterranean art of Alexander Petela* [NSFW]

    So I'd been building up this little collection over time, wondering when I might best introduce it, when it hit me today that, holy heck-- it's Pride Month, after all!

    So then...

    !

    https://i.imgur.com/lBa1EAd.jpeg

    This guy's just the best!

    TBH, I've been pretty fascinated with ancient Greek culture since I was a sprat. At one point in my early journals, I even ascribed actions of mine to various Greek gods, like Helios the Sun god, Apollo, Janus, and Athena...

    But not YOU, Zeus, oh no, buddy!! (eh, that dude was just too domineering for young me)

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/dvrh1MP.jpeg) Those are frankly some silly-ass journals, but what can I say? The things we once held dear as kids, amirite? XD

    Oh rabbits, sorry for wandering off, but the technicolor coin above is pretty cool, no?!

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/7pAUUaK.jpeg) Anyway, I love how some modern artists like Petela are such absolute bosses at mixing up modern art techniques & sensibilities with ancient, authentic art, such as the Minoan-inspired piece above.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/W6PHaBo.jpeg) Okay, that's an interesting... moustache? XD

    https://i.imgur.com/wzzZgly.jpeg

    Full disclosure, I guess-- I'm in the arts. It's both my hobby and my life.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/jRCJzjH.jpeg) I guess my point is-- this community will always be inclusive of all but the intolerant as long as I'm involved.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/pEKaART.jpeg) And of course, I <3 cephalopods.

    Honestly? I don't really know much about Alexander Petela, but I do gots some links, hey! https://alexandriad.tumblr.com/ https://www.redbubble.com/people/AlexanderPetela/shop

    0
  • An introduction to Erik's ***Detective Deschamps*** ("Call me Dédé!")

    Here's a nifty, noirish 5-tome series originally published by Epsilon / Verlag. The author "Erik" is a German graphic designer who seems to have worked outside the typical comics publishing format, and as a result I find there's a certain unconventionality to both his art and storytelling. Style-wise, the Dédé books remind me of Blacksad and Jérôme K. Bloche in that they're all a fairly casual mixture of pastiche and tribute to the genre, with traces of satire thrown in. This one happens to be my favorite of the three, having good pacing, wry humor, and being the least pretentious.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/badffEJ.jpeg) Almost an obligatory scene, but here's how it's handled in this series.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/t7uxRY4.jpeg) It's usually raining in Dédé's world, because of course.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/L48wOg1.jpeg) Here we see our detective's usual haunt, the café below his apartment.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/iCOywdX.jpeg) ...His girlfriend Yvette and a shot of his standard-issue office.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/NtVgTpu.jpeg) [!](https://i.imgur.com/qBB5FjR.jpeg) These come from his first adventure, which has some horror overtones. Dédé's hired by an anonymous caller to check on a series of elderly ladies, all of whom he discovers to not only be deceased, but somehow mummified as well(!)

    At this point I want to mention the art. While it has some 'LC' characteristics, it's also cartoonily expressive, visceral, and perhaps even self-indulgent. Facial expressions are usually over-exaggerated, female characters are built from the same toolbox, and color gradients are downright nonexistent. To be fair, the rather monotone color scheme is clearly meant to stack on the 'noir' concept, and does so pretty nicely. And while I'm nitpicking individual qualities which otherwise might annoy me, I did find that on the whole, the art works quite well. Some won't like it of course, but that's also where Erik's unconventionality comes in, which is worth a couple bonus pts for originality, I think.

    Alrighty then...

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/kxNcKYU.jpeg) Like Rodney Dangerfield, Dédé's typically in short supply of respect.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/VyqQZx9.jpeg) Speaking of the art, I like the isometric framing here, complete with angular rain. In terms of this particular adventure, someone's been leaving body parts around a little resort town. The inset faces represent some of the onlookers who might double as the perp.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/oWBsxJ5.jpeg) Another almost obligatory scene. Despite his generous build, our detective's not really a fighter, and has been worked over hard. Now he's headed home. Unfortunately he has to pass the café on the way there, and it doesn't go well.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/Z6oRduf.jpeg) Still, he can put his foot down when necessary.

    Unfortunately, there's not a lot of info out there about "Erik" and this series. It seems to have been translated to Dutch, but I'm not sure what else, nor where to get it. Scanlations perhaps, if you're in to digital comics. The GCD has a little info, if that helps.

    OTOH, Erik's site is still up, and he generously offers six-page previews of all his books, provided you can read German. There's also more about his background:

    https://www.eriks-comics.de/

    1
  • ***Natation*** (Nicolas Verdier)

    If that doesn't show up for some reason, the page link is here. I just happened to bump in to his work on Tumblr, the other day.

    He's uploaded a lot of cool, sketch-like animations recently: https://b-liba.tumblr.com/

    0
  • Closeup of ***Le Lombard - A Family Affair***, current exhibition at the **Comics Art Museum**

    A fun mix of familiar artists, characters, personalities, and... the obscure.

    This is zoomed in and upscaled from the event poster, with the exhibit running to the end of August 25th, 2024. The museum is located at rue des sables 20-1000, Brussels, Belgium.

    https://www.comicscenter.net/en/exhibitions/the-great-temporary-exhibitions/le-lombard

    0
  • ***Blue themes***-- Ten new-ish titles for BD comics fans

    I hadn't checked Mastodon for a while (I do it like this, which is also on the side bar), and discovered a load of promising titles coming out. Or which came out recently, I guess.

    Pics of the albums are in the thumbnail / lead image, and below is a listing with news sources. Some are in English, but with others need you'll to hit the "translate" button:

    NOTE: Jon Juarez is the artist for the bottom left one (Scavengers Reign), someone who I previously covered a little bit here.

    5
  • ***Answers to the Quiz*** (first appearances of ten classic characters)

    The quiz is here, for anyone who missed it. Following are the answers:

    . . .

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/UIALMzI.jpeg) 1. Bobo from Sillage ("Wake"). Altho they met as enemies, he wound up becoming one of protagonist Nävis' closest friends. She did, however, permanently blind him in one eye, as is just happening above.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/JuajMen.jpeg) 2. Bianca Castafiore, the Milanese Nightingale, from The Adventures of Tintin. As it happens, there's some slight differences of opinion regarding her singing talents.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/L4DGptd.jpeg) 3. Dogmatix ("Idéfix") from Asterix the Gaul, who was sitting right outside the Butcher's shop the duo entered. In fact he spends the rest of the album following Asterix & Obelix around Gaul, until finally at the big feast, Obelix happens to notice him: [!](https://i.imgur.com/HiUanWf.jpeg)

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/nbH5QwB.jpeg) 4. Herbert of Craftiwich, from Lewis Trondheim & Co.'s brilliant Donjon series. He's one of the two main adventuring characters along with "Marvin the Red" in this deep, varied series.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/PpQpuGn.jpeg) 5. Kriss of Valnor, from Thorgal. She's arguably the greatest, most complex villain across comic-dom, and even stars as the anti-hero in her own companion series. Gotta love how she disdainfully orders her future husband around here, i.e. Thorgal.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/rK50Rcu.jpeg) 6. Laureline, from Valérian and Laureline. She was originally a bold, curious-minded peasant girl from 11th century France, who happened to rescue Valérian in the first chronological adventure, Les Mauvais Rêves ("Bad Dreams").

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/mRP9mmz.jpeg) 7. Monsieur Choc, from Tif & Tondu, perhaps the least-known series on this list. "Mssr Choc," the man in the dress suit who always wears a medieval helmet, is in fact the leader of a global criminal organisation, not unlike "Blofeld" from the James Bond adventures.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/Hpw3n9v.jpeg) 8. RanTanPlan, from Lucky Luke, the dumbest dog in the universe. Actually he's probably right to flee the Daltons, here.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/hUGFOw0.jpeg) 9. Roxanna (or "Pelisse" in the French editions), from La Quête de l'oiseau du temps ("The Quest for the Time-bird"). Part of why I'm introducing her along with the other secondary characters in this list is because her father "Bragon" (seen here & earlier in the quiz) is really the main character, while Roxanna's very existence is more... subtle.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/bRLeAFb.jpeg) 10. A Smurf, from the Johann & Peewit adventure La flûte à six trous ("The six-holed flute"). The Smurfs proved so popular that they took over as author Peyo's main body of work in their spinoff series.

    4
  • ***We meet again... brutes!*** (full sequence included)

    While finishing up the "answers" section to the recent quiz, I accidentally bumped in to this panel (from Banquet) and was struck by how unique it was.

    Now, there have been plenty of times when an overconfident oaf looked to put Astérix in his place, only to be sent skyrocketing to the heavens, but in this rare case we have a solo legionary of mediocre physical build (name of "Spongefingus" in English) who's been worked in to a perfect wrath, eager to take on our Gaulish duo.

    Well, what the hey... let's see the backstory:

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/dua7z0c.jpeg)

    (previously, Asterix & Obelix on their tour through Gaul happened to gain possession of a 'breakdown' chariot, likely a playful anachronism, altho who knows?)

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/FL6wloK.jpeg)

    As usual, Obelix is dreadful at playing along, and now the vendetta is ignited.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/dBC0yQg.jpeg)

    > Brut: a French word meaning "raw," used to describe a style of wine that's very dry and crisp, with little to no added sugar. In this case, a dry, sparkling wine.

    9
  • A retro-futuristic look at the Beatles (Daniel Goossens, 2006)

    > The Beatles have matured > "A dynamic and realistic team" > > JOIN THE WINNING BEATLES TEAM BY FILLING OUT THE SUBSCRIPTION VOUCHER BELOW:

    This seems to come from his We walked on the bubble series of collectibles / postcards.

    Goossens is evidently a humorist and master of the surreal, who does a lot of work for Fluide Glacial magazine.

    > Goossens' stories can be best compared to the absurd sketches of the British comedy group Monty Python. He picks conventions from literature, film, television and history, giving them a surreal twist. His serial 'Route Vers L'Enfer' is a war film pastiche starring Father Christmas, while 'La Vie d'Einstein' tears down the myth of the theory of relativity and its inventor. > > He often uses the same documentary approach as his mentor Gotlib, as his stories are populated with TV hosts, interviewees and talk show guests. Besides being a cartoonist, Goossens is also a lecturer and researcher in artificial intelligence at the University of Paris VIII. --Bedetheque

    0
  • **Quiz**: *Who are the ten classic characters just about to appear?*

    I had an idea yesterday, so let's see how you like it. Below are sequences from ten classic BD series in which a well-known character is about to first appear. How many can you guess? (hint: these appear alphabetically by character name)

    1. [!](https://i.imgur.com/sGYQhSf.jpeg)

    2. [!](https://i.imgur.com/pZo6dLE.jpeg)

    3. [!](https://i.imgur.com/wAIMKYd.jpeg)

    4. [!](https://i.imgur.com/VWpEO7b.jpeg)

    5. [!](https://i.imgur.com/n7x5wLH.jpeg)

    6. [!](https://i.imgur.com/hmrzykN.jpeg)

    7. [!](https://i.imgur.com/KrkHeK7.jpeg)

    8. [!](https://i.imgur.com/QEBrzIH.jpeg)

    9. [!](https://i.imgur.com/AMZ1ldZ.jpeg)

    10. [!](https://i.imgur.com/8OzI5oc.jpeg)

    EDIT: And here are the answers: https://lemm.ee/post/33519501

    14
  • A little intro to Didier Comès via splash panels from ***Ergün The Wanderer***

    Specifically these are from T1: Le dieu vivant. Frankly I've only skimmed the book so far, but wanted to add some long-overdue Comès content, since I'm not sure I got to him before.

    Storywise, a wandering astronaut ("Ergün") is forced to land on a class-M planet, and Flash Gordon-like, has to deal with any number of strange peoples vying against each other. Then things go in to a sort of Conan the Barbarian direction, in which the hero is put to the physical test many times. Near the end there's also a stunning revelation that reminded me a bit of Planet of the Apes.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/6xQN4eb.jpg)

    While the above might sound like Comès simply pastiched popular works of the day, in fact this was his very first GN, one in which he played the triple-role of writer, artist and colorist(!) Being from 1974 it's a bit dated, yes, but is quite impressive given the circumstances, and I'd say still holds up pretty well today as some classic BD 'pulp.'

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/KvxgZkO.jpg)

    > Dieter / Didier Comès was born in 1942 in Sourbrodt, Belgiam, a small village in the east. His father spoke German and his mother Walloon & French, and he defined himself as a "bastard of two cultures", a characteristic of which we will find traces in his imagination. When he left school at 16, he worked as an industrial designer in a textile company in Verviers. At the same time, he learned about music. He was especially interested in jazz, trying his hand at percussion, and only came to comics later. > > In 1969, he wrote Hermann, a gag strip published in Jeunesse du Soir. In 1973, Pilote published the first episode of "Ergun the Wanderer, The Living God." The second episode, "The Master of Darkness," would not appear until 1980 by Casterman. In 1975, the man already considered to be the spiritual heir of Hugo Pratt, wrote L'Ombre du Corbeau. It was in 1980 that Casterman published Silence, an album which established Comès reputation, and for which he abandoned color for the technique of black and white. Later came La Weasel (1983), Eva (1985), L'Arbre-Coeur (1988), Iris (1991) and La Maison Where Trees Dream (1995). Comès passed away in 2013. --Bedetheque & Johnny

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/hMaIs66.jpg)

    (side note: why do I love skeletons so much?)

    In Lambiek's entry I think one can see the Pratt influences: https://www.lambiek.net/artists/c/comes.htm

    1
  • *"I have summoned you because..."*

    These sequences come from early in the sixth album, Asterix and Cleopatra by René Goscinny & Albert Uderzo.

    BACKSTORY: Caesar tells Cleopatra that he doesn't think much of 'modern' Egypt, claiming that all the great works were built during ancient Egypt's heyday, thousands of years before. Which was in fact true, as Cleopatra herself was part of a recent dynasty of Greek conquerors. Nevertheless, she's mortally offended on behalf of herself and her nation, and vows to build a great palace to Caesar in a mere three months' time(!)

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/sZ6F4oo.jpeg)

    Haha, I love the wittiness of that right panel above, which reminds me of classic Shaw Bros Kung Fu films. I mean the unintentional hilarity of choppy dubbing, that is.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/tl3uc2d.jpeg)

    Such a great premise for a classic adventure, no?

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/i0CG3KU.jpeg)

    I always appreciated the transition from the queen's palace set in the baking sands of Egypt all the way to the rustic little village in wintertime. Somehow it satisfies the eyes and the soul, both. And for the sharp-eyed, the little dog that tagged along in the last adventure (Banquet) pops up again just above, altho isn't named just yet.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/8274gx7.jpeg)

    Hats-off to the momentum-building! Indeed, Goscinny & Uderzo are one of the great writer-artist teams in comics at the tip-top of their game, here. But let's also not forget translators Bell & Hockridge, who routinely did an astonishing job of preserving the cleverness of the original French, even when it was pretty much impossible to convey the nuance or cultural references.

    EDIT: One last thing I want to add is that the leading panel is actually pretty small on the total page, and after a modest 160% upscale and 125% width-increase, still works beautifully as stand-alone art. A real tribute to Uderzo's attention to detail and composition skills, I think.

    17
  • The crazy-wonderful paintings of cartoonist Nicole Claveloux (8 pieces)

    That's Bal de têtes, above.

    A few weeks back I was pleased to discover that a beloved childhood comic I once had was free to read online here, which includes info about Claveloux' other Grabote comics. Later, I discovered more of her fine arts work, and have been just blown away.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/9PxFKF4.jpeg) [!](https://i.imgur.com/1Q7I7CW.jpeg) L: Coup de vent, R: La mer noire.

    Painter Hieronymus Bosch' work certainly comes to mind(!)

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/dYmZFNW.jpeg) [!](https://i.imgur.com/8fzU863.jpeg) L: Les images, R: Les 12 Moi

    What's with all the baby heads and masks? After a good bit of searching, I'm... still not sure. Still, her site helpfully reveals:

    > She's always loved drawing and looking at imagery, for example: illustrated books, tarot cards, illuminations, posters, advertisements, pious images and erotic images, laughing cows, comics, bookplates, culs-de-lampe, rebuses… > > Nicole loves images teeming with details, jumbles of characters (schizo-style), interior landscapes, metamorphoses, symbolic figures, caricatures, parodies, enactments of dreams, childhood memories, legged-fantasies and funny robots, and picture games.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/bnELJRH.jpeg) [!](https://i.imgur.com/8woneMa.jpeg) These are evidently closeups from a huge wheel-like piece named Les Vepres des grenouilles ("The Vespers of the Frogs")

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/bHwAerS.jpeg) St. Anthony, is that you?

    What I also greatly admire about Claveloux is her utter versatility. For example, one might look at her cartoons, her illustrations, her paintings, and never get a whiff that they were created by the same person.

    Loads more of her work here: http://nicole.claveloux.free.fr/

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  • ***Rock Rally '80***, poster by Ever Meulen (with Bowie)

    This was made for a band competition that runs every two years as organised by Flemish-Belgian magazine Humo. More art posters here.

    And a musical bonus, another by Meulen: [!](https://i.imgur.com/6Kh0KnR.jpeg)

    This isn't meant as a proper introduction to this Belgian artist's work, but I'll try to get to that later. Lambiek in fact has a great intro here.

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  • Covers! (full versions in post)

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/cQ6S303.jpeg) [!](https://i.imgur.com/CJ4tvaZ.jpeg)

    Here in the States, I sadly never saw any of these when they came out. The closest thing of course was Heavy Metal, which would \occasionally mirror Métal hurlant's covers, I think.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/l5nWJgM.jpeg) [!](https://i.imgur.com/hpOjgte.jpeg)

    It's neat to see how the format and style of the covers changed over time. I suppose there are some archive sites out there that track the whole run of Pilote & Spirou from day one; I just haven't looked yet.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/XKmwwF7.jpeg) [!](https://i.imgur.com/3f3ZrGX.jpeg)

    Interesting example of how Spirou (the character) got so many treatments over the years. Most of his stuff I've seen has a comedic or 'light adventure' vibe, yet here he is throwing down like a bad boy. Whoof!

    EDIT3: Looks like there was a global federation issue the past two days preventing this post from showing up in "active" (and maybe "new") streams. This cut way down on the number of people who could see it, I believe. Issue seems to be resolved, now.

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  • The water-prismatic art of "Tanbelia" (6 pieces)

    She's from Rivne, Ukraine, and although extensively trained in fine arts, seems to aim for a sort of impressionist-inspired 'intentional primitivism,' a bit like Henri Matisse's latter stuff, perhaps.

    But really, that's mostly just clumsy labelling on my part. In her own words (paraphrasing, haha), she's directly inspired by nature and, in terms of technique, the way that water forms a wavy, prismatic lens through which to view the world.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/UvivYIy.jpeg) [!](https://i.imgur.com/YRq5uZE.jpeg)

    > My art is about nature, reproduced in wavy forms, lines. With my artworks, I try to show people's deep connection with the environment and meaningfully remind contemporaries of the need to cherish and preserve nature. I’m reproducing art in wavy lines because I have a very close connection with water and these lines are water, nature waterflow. Like each wavy waterline crosses through different parts of our lives.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/vxpbdcI.jpeg)

    Now, it struck me that some of the color palettes and sense of design reminded me of Ukranian folk art, for example the right piece below, which has a sort of sgraffito technique, but hearkens back to traditional "Yuke" artistry, it seems to me.

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/ipjg4ox.jpeg) [!](https://i.imgur.com/3IzdlvP.jpeg)

    Tanbelia has more to say about how her work relates to environmental urgencies, below. And of course there are many more examples of her paintings, sculpture & craft:

    https://tanbeliaart.wixsite.com/tanbelia https://www.etsy.com/shop/TanbeliaPaintings

    EDIT: I'm pleased and grateful to say that once again, this little article is artist-approved. 🙂 Slava Ukraini.

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  • 1978: rainy day in the Ivory Coast (Clément Oubrerie)

    I love how the sketchiness of the inking works perfectly with this rainy scene. It's from book one of the terrific series Aya de Yopougon, scripted by Marguerite Abouet, recounting her life spent living in a small town in Côte d'Ivoire, late 70's. At least, that's the starting point. I'll try to do a proper overview later, after I've read more of the books.

    The French publisher is Gallimard / Bayou, and at least some of the books were translated to English by Drawn & Quarterly. An overview of the series is at Bedetheque.

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  • A short review of ***Hélas*** (i.e. "Alas") by Bourhis & Spiessert [mature]

    Haha, gotta love that last panel for the Red Rackham vibes. 😁

    So, I found Alas to be a nice, provocative read that also raised a lot of unsettling questions. It's set in a Paris of ~1900, in which anthropormorphic animals have caused humans to go near-extinct, hanging on here and there only in the wilderness. Story-wise, a hunting party finds a little human family of four, slaughters the parents, then captures a small boy and a girl named "Leaf." The rest of the book involves her story, as well as a porcine protagonist, "Léopoldine."

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/cd3dKai.jpeg)

    > Why does Leaf, a little human captured by poachers, cause such a stir in the country's political and scientific class? She speaks, of course! But that is not the only reason for the prosecution to which she will be subjected, despite the help given to her by the journalist Fulgence and the young Léopoldine, a science student and daughter of a famous professor. From traps to incredible escapes, from false leads to real dangers, Fulgence and Léopoldine will end up discovering the terrible truth. Against a backdrop of political intrigue, romance and dementia, a romantic adventure whose feline, porcine and canine actors demonstrate very... human concerns. --Bedetheque

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/UhsVHFQ.jpeg)

    Thematically there are definite resemblances to Orwell's Animal Farm and similar works, for example in questioning whether humans and other animals can ever properly get along without the former mistreating the latter (and vice-versa). Also-- are hierarchy and the need for control utterly inevitable, whether within the wilderness or urban settings?

    [!](https://i.imgur.com/bkTrW5M.jpeg)

    At ~70pp this reads quickly, and is more of a thought-experiment than something which aims for definitive conclusions. I wouldn't quite call it a classic, and it didn't exactly give me a 'cheerful, satisfied feeling' after reading it, but it's a fine story and good food for the thinking person, particularly one skeptical of man's footprint on Earth, let's say.

    I was not previously familiar with the work of writer Hervé Bourhis, artist Rudy Spiessert, nor colorist "Mathilda," but they're definitely on my list from now on. Oh, and the publisher is Dupuis, 2010.

    EDIT: Evidently a free English ebook was available for some time at this link, a service I was unaware of until today. Folks might want to check that site out for other free e-graphic novels.

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  • ***You again!*** (Yves Chaland, from "Bob Fish")

    This is from the book Les cybers ne sont pas des hommes ("Cybers are not men"), in which François Landon wrote the script. The book follows a format in which text appears on one page, then a wordless splash page on the next. I found the 1st/3rd-person narrative rather surreal, almost cynical in tone, in which a couple survivors of a plane crash must contend with a mad scientist's collection of robots... or something like that. Very 50's American sci-fi movie-style, it seemed to me.

    The opening text begins: (thanks to Google-Translate) [!](https://i.imgur.com/X5tzBjQ.jpeg)

    So an interesting experiment I guess, but I feel like Chaland pulled this kind of thing off far more effectively with his own Freddy Lombard, which was a pretty lively pastiche / parody series.

    If any native French-speaker knows this one, I'd be interested in your views. Certainly the art is neat to look at for any LC-fancier!

    If you're not familiar with Chaland: https://www.lambiek.net/artists/c/chaland.htm

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  • A parting shot-- Annie Gillain, a blissfully happy baby, Jijé, Morris & Franquin (L-R)

    The back cover from the album we covered a couple weeks ago.

    Three Belgium comic artists set out to make their fame & fortunes in the 'land of Walt Disney,' only to come crashing back to earth in Europe, ironically becoming BD superstars in their own rights.

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  • *Farmer Giles pursues Chrysophylax* (Pauline Baynes)

    Baynes was an English artist who illustrated a landslide of works in an impressive variety of styles over the years. The turning point came from... well:

    > J.R.R. Tolkien had written Farmer Giles of Ham, a humorous novella about dragons and knight-errantry set in a faux-medieval period, but was dissatisfied with the work of the artist who had been chosen as illustrator. Baynes's work caught Tolkien's eye and she got the job, creating a lively set of pictures that wittily pastiche the look of illuminated medieval manuscripts. So perfectly did Baynes capture the essence of Tolkien's tale that he declared them to be "more than illustrations, they are a collateral theme". He also delighted in reporting that friends had said that her pictures had succeeded in reducing his text to "a commentary on the drawings"(!)

    It seems Tolkien also wanted her to illustrate the Lord of the Rings books, but it was not to be. Just imagine the Hildebrandt brothers with serious competition, hey?

    In any case, she did do a nice map for LotR: [!](https://i.imgur.com/K6d1kzV.jpeg)

    Lots more of her art and life-story below, including more on her collaborations with Tolkien:

    https://www.paulinebaynes.com/

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