Null Stibane/Didgé/La petit histoire de la prostitution. Original board from the…
Description

Stibane/Didgé/La petit histoire de la prostitution. Original board from the T2 album illustrating the belle époque theme, with a bonus mini strip. Fun, high-quality work. India ink circa 1996. TBE+. 30 X 40 cm Didier Chardez (1953), alias Didgé, has long been a writer of humorous comics. His professional career began in the 70s, in Tintin and Spirou. He penned the 6-volume adaptation of the Caméra Café series. In a completely different style, he drew a realistic story for Casterman: "La Malédiction d'Edgar" (Edgar's Curse), adapted from the novel by Marc Dugain, who wrote the screenplay. Three albums. For Coccinelle Éditions, in collaboration with Francis Carin, he drew "Antoine-Frédéric Ozanam. L'Ère Nouvelle" and "À travers les Montagnes. La vie de saint Josémaria", under the pseudonym E. Gabriel. He wrote the screenplay and drew "Joseph André Audace et don de soi" and "Durbuy La plus petite ville du monde". Since 2018 he has been working on the series (3 volumes) Sexysun.

280 
Online

Stibane/Didgé/La petit histoire de la prostitution. Original board from the T2 album illustrating the belle époque theme, with a bonus mini strip. Fun, high-quality work. India ink circa 1996. TBE+. 30 X 40 cm Didier Chardez (1953), alias Didgé, has long been a writer of humorous comics. His professional career began in the 70s, in Tintin and Spirou. He penned the 6-volume adaptation of the Caméra Café series. In a completely different style, he drew a realistic story for Casterman: "La Malédiction d'Edgar" (Edgar's Curse), adapted from the novel by Marc Dugain, who wrote the screenplay. Three albums. For Coccinelle Éditions, in collaboration with Francis Carin, he drew "Antoine-Frédéric Ozanam. L'Ère Nouvelle" and "À travers les Montagnes. La vie de saint Josémaria", under the pseudonym E. Gabriel. He wrote the screenplay and drew "Joseph André Audace et don de soi" and "Durbuy La plus petite ville du monde". Since 2018 he has been working on the series (3 volumes) Sexysun.

Auction is over for this lot. See the results

You may also like

Stibane et Franquin/Noël et L'éalaoin. Original end plate from the 4-page story "Retrouvailles" published in the 1990 album of the same name. Superb quality of execution in collaboration with the master. India ink and graphite. Signed and contextualized by the author. Circa 1990. TBE+. Rare. 33 X 22 cm Luc Van Linthout (1958), alias Stibane, graduated in plastic arts from the Institut Saint-Luc. In addition to illustration, he has devoted himself to comics and painting. Stibane first appeared in Tintin in 19864. He produced Woody et Willy, then Peticric, based on a script by Michel Dusart. In comics, Stibane produced the 1989 revival of Petit Noël, under Franquin's direction (Marsu Productions). He also drew the comic adaptation of Sherlock Holmes, with André-Paul Duchâteau on the script, for Editions Lefrancq, in the "BDétectives" collection. Three albums appeared in the early 1990s6. With his brother as scriptwriter, he draws the series Les Enquêtes Scapola (three albums with Casterman). Also with Georges Van Linthout and Didgé, he adapted the TV series Caméra Café (five albums from 2003 to 2006, published by Jungle). In 2006, he also produced a comic book about French humorists Chevallier and Laspales. In collaboration with Bruno Di Sano, he published the first two volumes of Les Aventures de Fred et Jamy, an adaptation of the TV show C'est pas sorcier. In 2012, with Didgé and Georges Van Linthout, he produced a comic adaptation of the TV series Camping paradis.