In josgonart  's collection
Placitas - QUINO complete page. Rico Tipo 1302. SIGNED - Comic Strip
239 

Placitas - QUINO complete page. Rico Tipo 1302. SIGNED

Comic Strip
1971
Ink
39.5 x 30 cm (15.55 x 11.81 in.)
Share
Detail
Detail
Detail
Detail
Detail

Description

Quino (Joaquín Salvador Lavado). Complete page published Rico Tipo# 1302. SIGNED.
Primera época de Quino, mas esquemática que la que realizó posteriormente. Se puede comparar la linea simple y clara de este estilo y el otro estilo algo mas reconocible y ambos únicos e inimitables, sin duda, era un genio!
En esta primera época dibujaba muchas viñetas sin palabras, aunque según cuentan, Divito, editor y dueño de Rico Tipo, quería que Quino dibujara sus chistes con palabras.
Entrevista a Quino realizada por Lucía Iglesias Kuntz, periodista del Correo de la UNESCO:
"Usted dibuja indistintamente con y sin palabras, ¿cree que el texto es indispensable para la comprensión del humor?
Yo lo preferiría sin palabras. Pero hay ideas que no se entenderían nunca si no les agregas texto. En humor ocurre un poco como en el cine. Todo Chaplin, por ejemplo, no necesita palabras. Jacques Tati tampoco las necesitaba. Pero Woody Allen, que no hace gags visuales, si no habla pierde toda la gracia."

Inscriptions

Top center

To leave a comment on that piece, please log in

About Quino

Joaquín Salvador Lavado, better known by his pen name Quino ( born 17 July 1932), is a Argentine Spanishcartoonist. His comic strip Mafalda (which ran from 1964 to 1973) is very popular in Latin America and many parts of Europe.Joaquín Salvador Lavado was born in Argentina province of Mendoza, 17 July 1932. He was called "Quino" since childhood, to distinguish him from his uncle, the illustrator Joaquín, who helped to awaken his vocation of cartooning at an early age. In 1945, after the death of his mother, he enrolled and started his studies at Escuela de Bellas Artes de Mendoza.Shortly after, his father died when Quino was 16 years old; a year later he abandoned his studies, with the intent to become a cartoonist. Soon he would sell his first illustration, an advertisement for a fabric store. He tried unsuccessfully to get a job with the editorial houses in Buenos Aires.