PARIS.- In its Comic Strip sale on 21 November 2020,
Artcurial will reveal an exceptional and highly original item: the artwork by Georges Rémi, known as Hergé, designed for the cover of the 1936 album Le Lotus bleu.
Deemed too costly to reproduce with the four-colour technique used in 1936, the design was turned down by the publisher Casterman. This original artwork, new to the market, has been rediscovered today by Artcurial. The rarity of this gouache is explained by the fact that it has not been seen for over eight decades. Hergé gave it to the young son of publisher Louis Casterman. Being just seven years old, the boy had no idea of the future value of this treasure, and kept it tucked away in a drawer, carefully folded in six. It has been conserved in wonderful condition, having not seen the light for over 80 years.
This initial cover design for Le Lotus bleu, Tintins fifth adventure and the album that marked a turning point in Hergés career, is undoubtedly one of the most evocative covers of any of the young reporters adventures. After becoming friends with Tchang Tchong-Jen, the only real person other than Al Capone to be incorporated into the adventures of Tintin, Hergés style changed, becoming more assured.
This artwork in Indian ink, watercolour and gouache on paper is estimated at 2 3 M / 2.3 3.4 M$. It will be presented across Europe, exhibited in Artcurials gallery in Monaco from 15 July to 11 September, in Brussels from 22 September to 2 October and finally in Paris on 19 and 20 November, before coming under the hammer on 21 November at Artcurial.
The leader in this field, Artcurial currently holds eight of the top ten auction prices for work by Hergé, including the world record price for a comic strip drawing by any artist, achieved on 24 May 2014 for the inside cover pages of a Tintin album (2.6M / 3.6M$). The sale of the rare and unique artwork for Le Lotus bleu promises to create a stir once again, for the delight of all fans of the 9th art.
« This artwork is a genuine masterpiece encaspulating Hergés genius and is probably the most beautiful Tintin album cover ever ! » --Eric Leroy, Expert Comic Strips, Artcurial
The friendship between Hergé and Tchang
It was in 1934 that Hergé decided to send Tintin to China. Following four adventures in Soviet Russia, America, the Belgian Congo and Egypt, in the fifth album, Tintin took off for China. Unlike the previous four albums, in creating Le Lotus bleu, Hergé was careful to learn about the culture and history of the country, wanting to add a greater sense of realism. This led him to meet Tchang Tchong-Jen, the young graduate from the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels. « The meeting between Hergé and Tchang would have a big influence on the style of Hergé. » explains Eric Leroy, Comic Strip expert at Artcurial. « It allowed the artist to discover a remarkable fluidity and freedom evident in his treatment of light and dark, through the brushstrokes he used for form and space, expressing the evolution of Hergés thinking and Taoism. » The friendship between the two men gave a new dimension to the world of Tintin, enriched by a cultural understanding and a free and assured style.
This reference album, considered to be one of the finest in the Tintin universe, marked a turning point with a new considered and realistic approach developed by Hergé towards his young hero and the foreign countries he travelled to. « It was at the time of Le Lotus Bleu that I discovered a new world » he confided in 1989 (SADOUL,Numa, Interviews with Hergé, Tournai, Casterman). The career and work of Hergé can be divided into two phases of before and after Le Lotus bleu.
Le Lotus bleu, a breakthrough album for Hergé
Published in 1936, Le Lotus bleu was the first Tintin album to achieve real success. A strong and continuous storyline along with the first colour « inset » illustrations contributed to this success. « Hergé said that the comic strip was all about telling a story. This illustration for Le Lotus Bleu, probably the most beautiful cover of any of Tintins adventures, encapsulates the mood of the album perfectly. The direct use of colour is rare in Hergés work. » explains Eric Leroy.
In Le Lotus bleu, Tintin sets out to break up the international opium trafficking ring in China, a country he knows nothing about. Accompanied by his new ally Tchang, a nod to Hergés friend, the young detective succeeds in overcoming all the obstacles he encounters, with many wild adventures along the way. From July onwards, Artcurial invites all fans of the 9th art to come and discover this unique piece, fresh to the market.