In DogMengo  's collection
Jaguar T4 by Jan Bosschaert, Jean Dufaux - Comic Strip
1510 

Jaguar T4

Comic Strip
2005
Mixed Media
Crayon, encre, sur fond d'impression
40.5 x 54.5 cm (15.94 x 21.46 in.)
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Jaguar

Description

Jaguar T4, Dog Mengo, planche 3

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Comment

Produit en technique mixte sur carton Bristol avec sept zones d'image, ils ont été rognés sur les zones d'image et apposés sur une feuille de 54.5 x 40.5 cm de carton Bristol. En 2002, Bosschaert gagne le Prix ​​du meilleur album au septième festival de la bande dessinée La Haute Normandie à Darnétal pour le premier album de la série "Jaguar".

Geproduceerd in gemengde techniek op Bristol-karton met zeven beeldoppervlakken, bijgesneden tot de beeldgebieden en bevestigd op een vel van 54.5 x 40.5 cm Bristol-karton. Jaguar is ook uitgegeven in Frankrijk en Zwitserland (dat was mogelijk doordat Bosschaert bij Uitgeverij Casterman was terechtgekomen). In 2002 ontving Bosschaert de Prijs voor het beste album op het zevende stripfestival van La Haute Normandie in Darnétal (Rouen) voor het eerste deel van de reeks "Jaguar"

Publication

  • Dog Mengo
  • Casterman
  • 03/2005
  • Interior page

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About Jan Bosschaert

Jan Bosschaert was born in Borgerhout in Flanders in 1957. He was raised in Wijnegem, close to the forest, in a house with a large garden. He spend most of his free time drawing. He made his first comic when he was about 10, and continued in the next years with comics in different genres, ranging from Sherlock Holmes stories to his own version of Lucky Luke. One of his comics, about two senior scouts, he shows to established comics creator Eddy Ryssack, whose main advice is to make sure everything is well documented. He also loved the work of André Franquin which he discovered at the age of 14 at a comics fair in Brussels. His puberty was a rather unhappy period, where Bosschaert withdrew into his own world and into music. He listened to artists like Tom Waits or Jackson Browne, but kept on drawing. When he was 18 years old, he visited comics author Pom. Seeing the poverty the author lives in is quite a shock, but it didn't stop him of becoming an artist himself.