In BillBaroud  's collection
Yann, Didier Conrad, Les Innommables - Shukumei - PL 16 - Comic Strip
2735 

Les Innommables - Shukumei - PL 16

Comic Strip
1980
Ink
25 x 33 cm (9.84 x 12.99 in.)
Share

Comment

Encre de Chine. 25 x 33 cm.
A priori, pour cette planche publiée dans Spirou, du numéro 2219 à 2229, on part toujours sur un découpage et un encrage de Yann, tandis que les crayonnés sont de Conrad.
Petite coquetterie amusante: la numérotation en bas de page à droite (planche 16, à vue de fesses), d'un humour exquis, rappelle la période bénie des hauts de pages de Spirou magazine, honnie par certains auteurs (Leloup et De Gieter en font encore des cauchemars).

Pas une page majeure graphiquement de l'album (encore que les cases extérieures sous la pluie sont superbes), mais une bel exemple de drôlerie en termes de dialogues et d'humour nihiliste, de la part de deux surdoués qui ne respectaient rien, mais alors vraiment rien, à l'époque des faits.

8 comments
To leave a comment on that piece, please log in

About Yann

Yannick Le Pennetier, better known as Yann, began his career as an artist, but soon became one of France's most popular scenario-writers. After spending several years in Brittany, he moved to Brussels. After working in the advertising and architecture fields, his earliest comic stories appeared in the "Carte Blance" section of Spirou in 1974. He then went to work for Curiositiy magazine for a while, but returned in Spirou to begin a fruitful collaboration with Didier Conrad. They became infamous for their satirical illustrations on the tops of the pages, and most notably, their 'Les Innomables' series in 1980. While Yann drew and Conrad wrote the first story of this series, the duo switched duties from the second series. This adult series didn't fit in the juvenile atmosphere of the magazine, which led to the comic's disappearance in 1983. Yann and Conrad then transferred to Glénat publishers, where they began 'Bob Marone' in Circus, a parody on the famous 'Bob Morane' character by Henri Vernes. Around this time, Yann began focusing more and more on the scriptwriting, leaving the artwork to others. After breaking up with Conrad, Yann began several new collaborations. Text (c) Lambiek