The Citizen (Gauteng)

Tintin painting fetches R57m

THE BLUE LOTUS: HERGE’S REJECTED COVER IS FLAWED Claimed to have been given to publisher Louis Casterman by the artist.

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An original painting by Tintin creator Herge sold for a record €3.2 million (about R57.6 million) at an online sale on Thursday, auction house Artcurial announced.

The item, intended as a front cover for The Blue Lotus volume from 1936, easily beat the previous record for the sale of comic book art of €2.65 million, which was reached in 2014 for a double-page drawing by Herge.

The gouache, ink and watercolou­r creation measures 34 by 34cm and features Tintin and his dog Snowy emerging from a porcelain jar in front of a menacing depiction of a Chinese dragon.

It was judged to be too expensive to reproduce by the Herge’s publisher, which ultimately used a simplified version of the same scene for The Blue Lotus cover.

The selling price – higher than Artcurial’s estimate of €2.2 million to €2.8 million – underscore­s the tremendous appetite for original memorabili­a of Tintin, whose adventures have entertaine­d people of all ages since the 1930s.

The buyer was a “private collector”, Artcurial said, without giving their identity.

“I’m not surprised by the price. It is one of the most beautiful and finest works of Herge’s to come up for auction and it’s a distorted market,” Herge biographer and Tintin expert Michael Farr said.

“Like all markets, it’s a question of supply and demand, and there is practicall­y no supply.”

In 2016, an original drawing from Explorers on the Moon sold for €1.55 million, then a record for a single comic book page.

Herge, a Belgian whose real name was George Remi, had sold some 230 million Tintin albums at the time of his death in 1983.

Rob Salkowitz, author of Comic-Con and the Business of Pop Culture, stressed that the best comic book work commands prices akin to fine art from investors and rich enthusiast­s.

“Tintin is the most iconic and beloved character in the European comics pantheon, with fans worldwide,” he said.

Tight control over Herge’s estate, with his work held by a personal museum in Brussels, means that few original works come to market, so “collectors can’t be choosy,” he explained.

The painting sold for its astronomic­al price, despite having clearly visible crease marks.

It was offered for sale by the heirs to Tintin publisher Louis Casterman. They claim it was given by Herge to Casterman’s son who kept it folded up in a drawer.

Other experts have cast doubt on this, saying the drawing is not dedicated, unlike other gifts from

Herge and might have been folded by the artist himself when he sent it by post to his publishers. –

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