In PALENZA  's collection
Philippe Bertrand, LINDA AIME L'ART   couleur directe - Comic Strip
140 

LINDA AIME L'ART couleur directe

Comic Strip
2003
Watercolor
Encre de Chine
25 x 31 cm (9.84 x 12.2 in.)
Dessin : 19 x 26
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Description

planche originale couleur n°9 sur papier 220g

Inscriptions

signature : PHILIPPE BERTRAND

Publication

  • Rester normal à Saint Tropez
  • Dargaud
  • 06/2004
  • Interior page

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About Philippe Bertrand

Although Philippe Bertrand is mostly known today for his beautiful erotic work, he started out as a cartoonist in the tradition of clear line drawing, having his work published in Partisans and L'Idiot International in the early 1970s. During this decade, he also cooperated with Zinc and Charlie Mensuel, for which he drew his first personal comic, 'A Cet Instant aux Antipodes' in 1979. It did not take him long to find out that this would not give him a place in comic history. Bertrand's answer was the self-termed "nouvelle manière," a new and colorful style of drawing and composition in which he created an aesthetic atmosphere that toned down the eroticism in his work. His first work in this style was the erotic 'Scènes d'Intérieur' portfolio and the 'Linda Aime l'Art' series, published in Pilote. An animated series of 'Linda', written by Bertrand, aired on Canal+ under the title 'Dix-neuf'. In 1984, he worked with Jean-Marie de Busscher on the black-and-white comic 'Olympia', published in À Suivre. In 1988, he produced 'Collection Privée', a small illustrated book published by Futuropolis. In the following year, he drew 'Oh! Kitty' in the rock magazine Best. A book collection was published by Les Humanoïdes Associés. Bertrand, now famous for this style, has been asked to do artwork for various projects. Texte (c) Lambiek

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