In Nikopol 's collection
Philippe Francq, Crayonné femme pour la série Largo Winch - Original art
87 

Crayonné femme pour la série Largo Winch

Original art
Pencil
21 x 29.7 cm (8.27 x 11.69 in.)
Share

Description

Crayonné d'un personnage féminin pour la série Largo Winch de Philippe Francq et Jean Van Hamme aux Éditions Dupuis

Inscriptions

Signé

Comment

Je suis la série Largo Winch depuis son origine. Je lui reste fidèle même si le scénariste a changé.
C'est un peu la série madeleine de Proust avec Thorgal.
J'ai toujours adoré les personnages féminins de Philippe Francq et lors d'une exposition parisienne, j'ai craqué pour ce crayonné avec le chignon typique de ce créateur.

To leave a comment on that piece, please log in

About Philippe Francq

Philippe Francq, born in Etterbeek, Belgium, is a Belgian comic book artist best known for the Largo Winch series. Philippe Francq studied at the Institut Saint-Luc in Brussels from 1978. He graduated in 1984, after having taken comics courses from Claude Renard for three years. He was an artist for the Belgian Olympic Comity for while, where he designed the mascot. He then worked as a background artist for Bob de Moor at the Hergé Studios. He teamed up with Bob de Groot in 1987, and created a series of short stories, that were collected two books, 'Des Villes et des Femmes' (Dargaud). In addition, he illustrated two stories with 'Léo Tomasini' with text by Francis Delvaux in 1988-89. It was in 1988, when Francq met writer Jean Van Hamme. Van Hamme proposed him to do a comics series, based on a series of novels he had written. The first book of the 'Largo Winch' series appeared in 1990 at the publishing house Dupuis. This thriller about a young vagabond at the top of a multinational corporation, was a big hit right from the start. Upon the success of the comic series, the original novels were reprinted and a television adaptation with real-life actors was created, as well as a feature film in 2008. Text (c) Lambiek