A Paris auction house sold an original painting made for the 1936 Tintin comic book "The Blue Lotus." The small Herge artwork fetched more than €3 million.
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Jean-Paul Casterman was seven years old when he received a piece of paper with a drawing on it. The child folded the small watercolor of a youngster and his dog hiding from a dragon in a gigantic Chinese vase and put it in a drawer, where it languished for decades.
The man who gave little Jean-Paul the gift was none other than Georges Remi, better known as Herge. The boy's father, Louis Casterman, headed the publishing house that published the Belgian illustrator's world-famous comics about the adventures of a young reporter called Tintin and his dog, Snowy.
The drawing was an early version for the cover of the 1936 The Blue Lotus. The editor rejected it, arguing that the multi-colored drawing was too expensive to print.
On Thursday, the 34 x 34 centimeter (13 x 13 inch) drawing went on sale at the Artcurial auction house in Paris — and fetched €3.2 million ($ 3.9 million).
Tintin and Snowy in China
Herge was a perfectionist and a visionary — and the 1936 volume of the Tintin series has a special place in Herge's artistic cosmos as it marks the illustrator's opening up to foreign cultures: in this case, to Chinese culture.
Herge studied the country's culture and history for The Blue Lotus to create a greater sense of realism, said Eric Leroy, a comics expert at the Artcurial auction house, based in Paris. "With stark colors, the eye contact between Tintin and the dragon captivates us," he told DW, adding that Tintin's faithful dog, Snowy, is also pictured. "Herge wanted us to feel the mysterious side of the story that is told in the framework of Chinese culture."
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The Blue Lotus — groundbreaking work
This work is an iconic comic image, "one of the most famous of the 20th century," says Leroy.
It is the second time Artcurial is auctioning a work from the Tintin universe. Herge's cover for the 1932 Tintin in America went under the hammer in 2012 for €1.2 million ($1.5 million) — a record sum for a francophone comic artist at the time. Just a few years later, in the summer of 2020, a few other Herge comic album covers achieved top prices.
Herge's widow has meanwhile said her husband by no means meant to give away that precious painting — and would like the work returned to her.
However, "the sellers are the rightful owners of the work. They are the heirs of Jean-Paul Casterman," Leroy says, adding that the widow's claims of ownership are mere assertions that have no legal basis.
Record prices for comic art
Original works by comics and fantasy artists have long fetched high prices at auctions; covers for fantasy magazines by artists such as Frank Frazetta have recently sold for several million dollars. In 2019, a Frazetta cover painting depicting an Egyptian queen changed hands for $5.4 million at a Chicago auction. "Buyer interest depends on the quality of the pieces. The market is strong, especially for increasingly rare copies," says comics expert Leroy.
Such elaborate works rarely find their way into museums, however. "The true home of 'The Blue Lotus' is the Musee Herge," the museum's director, Nick Rodwell, told French paper Le Monde. "But public collections can't keep up with those astronomical sums."
Cult but controversial: Belgian cartoonist Herge
As Artcurial holds the auction "The World of Herge," here's a look at how the work of the creator of Tintin reflects the ups and downs of the 20th century.
Image: Artcurial
Auction records
The Artcurial auction "The World of Herge," held on November 20, features 122 lots, including this 1969 drawing paying tribute to the Apollo XI moon landing. Another highlight is an original ink drawing from "Tintin: Land of Black Gold." The auction record for the most expensive work of comic book art is a Herge drawing that sold for €3.2 million ($3.8 million) in January 2021.
Image: Artcurial
The father of the 'ninth art'
If Brussels is recognized as the capital of European comics, it is thanks to the pioneering work of cartoonist George Remi, who wrote under the name Herge. In 2016 and 2017, the Grand Palais Museum in Paris held a huge retrospective on the creator of various cartoon series, including Tintin.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/ C. Petit Tesson
Tintin around the world
Herge is best known for creating Tintin, a young reporter traveling around the world for his work. Herge produced 24 volumes of his adventures; the last manuscript was unfinished but was posthumously published in 1986. These books, popular among readers of all ages, have been translated into more than 110 languages. Over 250 million books have been sold worldwide.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/ C. Petit Tesson
Pen name: RG
Born in 1907, Remi started signing his illustrations as Herge, the phonetic transcription of his initials, RG, in 1924. In 1928, he became editor of the Petit Vingtieme, a weekly supplement for the Belgian paper Vingtieme Siecle, in which the adventures of Tintin were first published.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/ C. Petit Tesson
First adventure: 'Tintin in the Land of the Soviets'
The first volume of Tintin's adventures was initially published from 1929 to 1930 in the weekly. In this anti-communist propaganda, Tintin was sent off to the Soviet Union with his dog, Snowy, where he was hunted down by the secret police while doing research on Josef Stalin's government.
Image: Hergé
Belgian colonial views: 'Tintin in the Congo'
For his second adventure, in 1931, Tintin was sent to the Belgian Congo. Shown here is a page of the album that Herge later redrew and colored for the books published by Casterman, like all his other early works. This volume was later criticized for its racist colonial views. Countries such as Belgium, Sweden, the UK and the US tried to have it banned or restrict its availability to children.
Image: Hergé
An influential Chinese friend
Even though his early books drew on stereotypes for comedic purposes, Herge was fascinated by ancient civilizations. While studying in Brussels, he met the Chinese artist Zhang Chongren, who helped Herge depict China in "The Blue Lotus." Pictured is a cover of the Petit Vingtieme, where it was first published in 1934. From then on, Herge would depict foreign societies more sensitively.
Image: Hergé
Landing on the moon years before Armstrong
Herge did extensive research to make his spacecraft as realistic as possible for the books "Destination Moon" and "Explorers on the Moon," initially published in 1950 as strips in the weekly "Tintin" and as volumes in 1953 — years before human space travel was achieved. Shown here is a mock-up of the rocket that appears in those stories, created by the visionary cartoonist.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/ C. Petit Tesson
Working for a collaborationist paper during the war
In 1940, Belgium was invaded by the Nazis. The weekly that published Herge's work was banned. The cartoonist moved on to another paper, Le Soir, which was under Nazi control. Although Herge did not collaborate actively, an interview in the Paris exhibition showed how his passivity under the occupation remained "a stain on his career," curator Jerome Neutres told news agency AFP.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/ C. Petit Tesson
A modern art lover
A little-known side of the cartoonist was also on show at the Herge exhibition. He was also a painter and an art collector. This photo features some of his paintings, revealing influences from artists such as Miro, Holbein and Rembrandt. However, painting remained a hobby for Herge.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Glaubitz
Herge as pop art
In 1979, US pop artist Andy Warhol was commissioned by Herge to produce a series of four portraits of him. That same year, Tintin celebrated his 50th anniversary — though the reporter never aged over the years.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/ C. Petit Tesson
A productive career
The cartoonist was also a graphic designer. His advertising work, as seen in these posters, featured a high level of formal creativity. Beyond Tintin, Herge was also the creator of several other characters, such as Quick and Flupke, as well as Jo, Zette and Jocko, whose adventures were told in five volumes. The prolific artist died in 1983.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Glaubitz
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This article was adapted from German by Dagmar Breitenbach.