The Standard (St. Catharines)

Tintin comic book art breaks auction record at $3.1 million US

- THOMAS ADAMSON AND OLEG CETINIC

PARIS — A Tintin drawing by the Belgian artist Herge sold Thursday in Paris for 2.6 million euros ($3.1 million), breaking the record for the most expensive comic book art in history.

The 1936 work in Chinese ink, gouache and watercolou­r was destined as a cover for “The Blue Lotus,” the fifth volume of the adventures of Tintin, a young reporter created by Herge.

The work features a red dragon on a black background by the frightened character’s face. It never graced store shelves because it was deemed too expensive to reproduce on a wide scale, a victim of the artist’s craftsmans­hip.

“They had to do a four colour process printing, with an additional colour. (But the publisher) thought that the comic albums were already expensive. Reproducin­g this cover art would increase the production costs,” said comics expert Eric Leroy at Art Curial auction house by the Champs-elysees avenue. In “Blue Lotus,” Tintin travels to China during the 1931 Japanese invasion with his dog, Snowy, to investigat­e and expose Japanese spy networks, drug-smuggling rings and other crimes.

The record price set at Thursday’s sale organized by the Artcurial auction house did not include auction fees. Work by Hergé, whose real name was Georges Remi, previously set the record for the most expensive pieces of comic book art with the front pages of Tintin comic books that also sold for 2.6 million euros, including auction fees.

“We set the previous record for the ‘Pages de Garde’ in 2014 ..it would be fair for this piece to break this record. Hergé had done only five comic covers using this technique of direct colour so it’s very rare,” Leroy had said prior to the auction

 ?? MICHEL EULER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Art expert Eric Leroy speaks next to the inked and water-painted original panel of the comic character Tintin from the 1936 "The Blue Lotus" album drawn by Belgian creator Herge.
MICHEL EULER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Art expert Eric Leroy speaks next to the inked and water-painted original panel of the comic character Tintin from the 1936 "The Blue Lotus" album drawn by Belgian creator Herge.

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