In Charlyd77 's collection
L'étranger by Jacques Ferrandez, Albert Camus - Comic Strip
3032 

L'étranger

Comic Strip
2013
Watercolor
50 x 65 cm (19.69 x 25.59 in.)
Added on 3/26/15
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Planche couleurs et N&B
Planche 20
Planche 21

Inscriptions

Signée Ferrandez

Comment

Planches 20 et 21.
Achetée à l'expo Champaka Paris en 2015.

Publications

  • L'Étranger
  • Gallimard
  • 04/2013
  • Interior page
  • L'Étranger
  • Gallimard
  • 04/2013
  • Page 24-25

Thematics


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About Jacques Ferrandez

Jacques Ferrandez was born in Alger, Algeria, but he and his family settled in Nice, France, when he was only a couple of months old. After a six year education at the National School of Decorative Arts, he embarked on a career in comics, starting with the story 'L'Homme au Bigos' in 1977. This comic, written by Rodolphe and prepublished in Télérama, introduced the character of 'Commissaire Raffini', whose further adventures appeared in four albums at Les Humanoïdes Associés between 1980 and 1988. Ferrandez and Rodolphe additionally cooperated on a series of short stories for À Suivre, as well as 'Anne et Charles' in Circus (1982-85), and some works for Métal Hurlant and Pilote. Stories by Ferrandez and Rodolphe were collected in books like 'Outsiders' (Les Humanoïdes Associés (1985) and 'Le Vicomte' (Dargaud, 1986). Also for À Suivre, Ferrandez wrote and drew 'Arrière-Pays', a series of short and more intimate stories. After a change of style in 1986, he began realizing his old dream: to tell a moving epic about his homeland, Algeria, and its fight for independence. Over the years, he produced a series of seven books, which depicted Algeria's modern history with sophistication in tasteful watercolors. This collection, called 'Carnets d'Orient', was prepublished in magazines like Corto and À Suivre. Text (c) Lambiek

More comic art by Jacques Ferrandez :