Chaque année pour mon anniversaire je fais un vœux. Avec les années j'ai trouvé une astuce imparable ...
L'Arabe du futur est une bande dessinée de Riad Sattouf. Pour le moment, il y a quatre volumes mais elle devrait en compter six !
Chaque année pour mon anniversaire je fais un vœux. Avec les années j'ai trouvé une astuce imparable ...
A collection of articles about 30 from The New Yorker, including news, in-depth reporting, commentary, and analysis.
Tag archive for Jacques Tardi.
Du 17 septembre 2015 au 10 janvier 2016, les passages couverts de Bercy Village accueilleront l'exposition The Parisianer, une trentaine d'illustrations avec chacune une vision différente de Paris.
Françoise Mouly interviews Adrian Tomine about his cover for this week’s issue of the magazine.
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This last month has been eye opening for me. Matt, Mori and I packed up our car and headed to Portland to meet up with Greg Oberle- who attended the ICON conference with me. We saw some pretty incredible illustrators talk about their work, their lives, their projects. I met Carson Ellis and almost f
Perhaps inspired by this 1950 Lilliput illustration Searle's 'Morbid Anatomies' first appeared in Holiday magazine HOLIDAY magazine February 1958 HOLIDAY magazine April 1961 Searle's agent was forced to threaten legal action when the series was later ripped off for a print campaign advertising London Fog overcoats. Vogue Magazine was good enough to commission the artist himself to produce this variation. . . . . . as was HOLIDAY magazine. "I found this Ronald Searle illustration, which accompanies a tongue-in-cheek article on Southern mores and manners by North Carolina–born author Frances Gray Patton, in the November 1959 issue of Holiday magazine. . ." http://southernontheinside.wordpress.com/2010/11/01/morbid-anatomy-of-a-southern-belle/#comment-254 Anatomy of an Antiquarian Bookseller 'Anatomy of an Amateur Golfer' Travel & Leisure Magazine 1972 The Morbid Anatomy was subsequently appropriated by other cartoonists. Cartoon Museum, London
An ugly witch is given an extreme makeover in this watercolor illustration by artist Ronald Searle. One of Searle's rare series of images created in 1966 and published in TV Guide.
Museums are mining detailed information from visitors, raising questions about the use of Big Data in the arts
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