In Zibbhebu  's collection
Illustration de Gaston Niezab - Original Illustration
1194 

Illustration de Gaston Niezab

Original Illustration
Mixed Media
Share

Inscriptions

Signée en bas à gauche

Comment

J'aimerais tout de même bien savoir d'où cela vient, mais pour l'instant, je n'ai aucune piste et l'oeuvre de Niezab est tellement gigantesque et pleine d'illustrations de livres et de revues dont les titres ne m'évoquent rien que je ne sais vraiment pas où chercher.

Thematics


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

About Gaston Niezab

Gaston Niezabytowski was a very productive French comics artist, whose most notable work is the 'Petit-Riquet Reporter' series. He signed most of his work with Niezab, or its anagram Bazein. He became an illustrator after working as a decorator in the Parisian Opera. From 1912 to the late 1930s his illustrations were published in Le Bon Point Amusant and in several magazines of the Offenstadt brothers (L'Intrépide, Le Petit Illustré). Niezab fought in Verdun during World War I. He created his first comics in the mid-1930s for publishers like Editions Modernes ('Guillaume Tell') and Rouff ('Ali Baba et les 40 Voleurs', 'Le Fantastique Voyage', etc.). He also drew small books with 'Jojo' for Le Petit Journal. During World War II he was present in Gavroche ('Kid Brown', 'Criquet, Gamin de Paris'), Pic et Nic ('Pavillion Noirs') and Fanfan la Tulipe ('Dramatiques Aventures d'Onésime Bocquillon'). After the War, Niezab continued his activities in Coeurs Vaillants, with 'Jack sans Peur'. He specialized in making short comics, contributing to the publications of S.A.E.T.L. At the same time, he took on adapting novels. Text (c) Lambiek