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All products André FRANQUIN • Products of the serie Gaston Lagaffe
REF : FRANQ-CDRE-01
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Framed Art Print by Franquin: Study for Cover - Gaston - Le Cas Lagaffe.
Material: Luxe Modigliani 285 gram paper.
Dimensions: 30 x 40 cm
The frame is made of smooth black wood with a flat 2.5 cm wide profile.
Frame made in France.
Gaston Lagaffe is a comic book character created by André Franquin. He first appeared in Le Journal de Spirou on March 7, 1957, as an employee of the journal, although no one knows who hired him. Gaston has the particularity of not belonging to any specific comic strip and is presented as an unemployed hero!
His main characteristics include being dreamy, lazy, lethargic, and terribly clumsy. He avoids work, loves sleeping above all, and despite his numerous blunders often creating absurd situations, he always manages to get out of them without too much trouble.
Franquin created Gaston to be a European incarnation of the American "beatnik." The novel On the Road by Jack Kerouac (also published in 1957) portrayed this indolent being, dressed in jeans rather than a suit, not revering work, eco-friendly before its time, loving animals, and not made for obedience...
It's evident that Gaston fully embodies this portrait! His love for animals (mainly cats and seagulls) is well established, and his disdain for parking meters and law enforcement, in general, is legendary!!!
This apolitical anarchist who wishes above all to live at his own pace and be happy is a character much more revolutionary than he may seem at first glance... Obviously, Franquin's devastating humor is at the heart of Gaston's adventures, but he is also a true UFO in the midst of the proactive heroes of Franco-Belgian comics in the 1960s.
From Michel Vaillant to Blueberry, from Tintin to Corto Maltese or Asterix, all are busy winning, rescuing widows and orphans, and even saving a people of Gauls (already resistant)! While Gaston has no particular ambition outside the pursuit of his quiet little life!! A precursor to the May '68 Generation, Gaston, through his enduring success, is now an icon of comics and popular culture, in the best sense of the term!
André FRANQUIN is a Belgian cartoonist, the main representative of the School of Charleroi, known as the Dark Line, in opposition to the Clear Line, whose main representative is Hergé.
After entering an art school, despite his father’s disapproval, he followed up with a small Belgian cartoon studio in the middle of World War II. It is there that he will meet Morris (future creator of Lucky Luke) and Peyo (future author of Smurfs). The adventure is short-lived, but Morris then takes him to Dupuis for the periodical Spirou. Here begins the real adventure!
It was Jigé who reigned over Spirou, drawing almost all the boards alone. But Jigé wants to keep time to focus on other projects and these young people engaged in the late 1940s, will be the "heirs"! Staying in the house of Jigé, first in Belgium, then following him in the United States and Mexico, the young comic books cretators will, based on Jigé’s experience, become the pillars of the Belgian comic book of the post-war period.
In June 1946, Franquin took over (in progress) an album by Jigé Spirou and the prefabricated house that had drawn the first 8 pages. He manages to make the transition invisible, slipping perfectly in the footsteps of Jigé. From then on, he became THE draughtsman of Spirou (originally created by Rob-Vel) and in 1952, he introduced in the album Spirou et les Héritiers a new character : the Marsupilami !
Like Jigé, before him, Franquin will have to surround himself with a team of young designers to ensure the speed of publication of the series on which he officiates; Greg, Jidéhem or Roba will be among those.
Once released from part of his work, in 1957, Franquin introduced a new character in the periodical Spirou: unemployed, blundering at all times, Gaston enters the scene! Franquin’s inventiveness appears here again, of an impressive modernity! Gaston benefits from the precise feature, the ability of the comic book artist to put the movement into a picture and, in a fully comic and burlesque tone, to surf on the time! (Remember that the comic book was primarily intended for children and adolescents, at that time)
The 60s will be marked by the too full! Franquin enters into a depression, feeling as if he is running in circles on Spirou and Fantasio (which he did not create, whose rights are the property of Dupuis), no longer feel like drawing these adventures that they feel like they yearn for his strength and do not represent what he loves and means. (It should be noted that the album that will make him fall in love: QRN on Bretzelburg, written by Greg, is considered by fans as one of the best albums of Spirou!). Jean-Claude Fournier will take over the series and Franquin will fully devote himself to Gaston !
In addition to Gaston (where the gags in one page become the rule and where gags in the background reinforce the comic side), Franquin becomes a screenwriter for other cartoonists (notably Will and Janin), then embarks on the adventure of the Trombone illustré (supplement at the heart of Spirou where Franquin has complete freedom during 30 issues). It is in this little periodical that Idées noires will be born. Breaking with the rest of his work, Franquin (in black and white) sketches a society in full decline where he attacks everything he does not like (military, religion, consumerism, etc). Besides, these years are political, Franquin drawing for Greenpeace, Amnesty or UNICEF and even making Gaston a character committed to ecology. It was Fluide Glacial (after the end of the Trombone illustré) who took over the publication of Idées noires, Gotlib being a friend and an admirer of Franquin.
Although he had given up on the Spirou and Fantasio adventure, Franquin still owned the Marsupilami he had created. But until 1987 (after two more years of depression that mades him stop everything), he did not stage it anymore! Under the impulse of a fan and with the help of Greg and a young cartoonist (Batem), he relaunches this iconic hero, with an immense success. He then invested himself in the animated series Les Tifous (to the point of abandoning Gaston!) for which he worked tirelessly, giving birth to 78 episodes.
He returned to Gaston for the release of Album n°15 in 1996. It met with tremendous success (650,000 copies sold in less than six weeks) and remained the last of the Gastons, since André Franquin died of a heart attack at the beginning of 1997, leaving orphans all these characters that punctuated our childhoods !
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