Jean Giraud
Jean Giraud |
Jean Giraud at the International Festival of Comics in Łódź, October 4, 2008. |
Born |
Jean Henri Gaston Giraud
May 8, 1938 (1938-05-08) (age 72)
Nogent-sur-Marne, Val-de-Marne, France |
Nationality |
French |
Area(s) |
Writer, Artist |
Pseudonym(s) |
Moebius, Gir |
Notable works |
Blueberry
Arzach
The Incal |
Awards |
Full list |
Official website |
Jean Henri Gaston Giraud (born May 8, 1938[1]) is a French comics artist. Giraud has earned worldwide fame, not only under his own name but also under the pseudonym Moebius, and to a lesser extent Gir, the latter appearing mostly in the form of a boxed signature at the bottom of the artist's paintings, for instance the volumes' covers.
Biography
Blueberry is one of Moebius' most famous creations.
Jean Giraud was born in Nogent-sur-Marne, in the suburbs of Paris, in 1938.[2] At age 16, he began his only technical training at the Arts Appliqués.[3] At 18, he was drawing his own comic strip, "Frank et Jeremie" for the magazine Far West. In 1961, Giraud became an apprentice of Jijé, one of the leading comic artists in Europe of the time, and collaborated on an album of Jerry Spring.[3] In 1962 Giraud and writer Jean-Michel Charlier started the comic strip Fort Navajo for Pilote. It was a great hit and continued uninterrupted until 1974. The Lieutenant Blueberry character, created by Giraud and Charlier for Fort Navajo, quickly became its most popular character, and his adventures as told in the spin-off Western serial Blueberry, are possibly Giraud's best known work in his native France. Giraud's prestige in France – where comics are held in high artistic regard – is enormous; In 1988 Moebius was chosen, among 11 other winners of the prestigious Grand Prix of the Angoulême Festival, to illustrate a postage stamp set issued on the theme of communication.[4] Under the names Giraud and Gir, he also wrote numerous comics for other comic artists like Auclair and Tardi.
One of the Starwatcher series of paintings.
The Moebius pseudonym, which Giraud came to use for his science fiction and fantasy work, was born in 1963.[3] In a satire magazine called Hara-Kiri, Moebius did 21 strips in 1963–64 and then disappeared for almost a decade. In 1975 Métal Hurlant (a magazine which he co-created) brought it back and in 1981 he started his famous L'Incal series in collaboration with Alejandro Jodorowsky. Moebius' famous serial The Airtight Garage and his groundbreaking Arzach also began in Métal Hurlant.
Moebius has contributed storyboards and concept designs to numerous science fiction films. In 1982 he collaborated with director René Laloux to create the science fiction feature-length animated movie Les Maîtres du temps (released in English as Time Masters) based on a novel by Stefan Wul. In 1988 Moebius worked on the American comic character The Silver Surfer with Stan Lee for a special two-part limited series. Moebius' take on the character was unfavourably alluded to in the film Crimson Tide by Lt. Commander Ron Hunter (played by Denzel Washington) in deference to that of Silver Surfer co-creator Jack Kirby (in a scene written by an uncredited Quentin Tarantino ). Giraud is also known to be a friend of filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki. From December 2004 to March 2005, the two of them shared an exhibition at La Monnaie in Paris which showcased work by both artists.[5] He even named his daughter Nausicaä from Miyazaki's Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind.[6][7]
Jean Giraud drew the first of the two-part last volume of the XIII series titled La Version Irlandaise (The Irish Version) from a script by Jean Van Hamme, to accompany the second part by the regular team Jean Van Hamme-William Vance, Le dernier round (The Last Round). Both parts were published on the same date (13 November 2007).[8]
Style
His graphic style can change dramatically and adapt to the style and the tone of the series. It ranges from the extreme realism of the beginning of his career as in the Aventures du lieutenant Blueberry, started in 1963, to dream-like nature in more recent works. He has drawn etchings, white and black illustrations, work in colour of the ligne claire genre, water colours.[9]
Most of his own series are related to fantastical science fiction. Several contain poetic elements, and some are also related to metaphysics. Censorship was quite strong in the 1960s, including in Pilote, which was a magazine for children, and Giraud could really express himself thanks to his own series published in Métal Hurlant, for example. He was one of the most influential artists in France who contributed to the emergence of comics for an adult public.
The artist's working methods were also various and adaptable. Giraud's solo Blueberry works were sometimes criticized by the fans of the series, because the artist had dramatically changed the tone of the series as well as the graphic style.[10] However, Blueberry's early success was also due to Giraud's genius, as he did not content himself with following earlier styles, an important aspect of development as an artist.[11]
To keep an artist difference between his Giraud and Moebius work, Giraud used a brush for his own work and a pen when he signed his work as moebius.
Giraud used to draw a lot on notebooks, several of which were displayed at the occasion of exhibitions. Besides these notebooks, numerous original drawings, and comic strips have been also on display. Giraud draws very quickly [12] and is known as one of the fastest artists.
Works
Comics
Jean Giraud has been active in the comics scene since the 1960s. Those works for which English translations have been published are noted as such; their respective pages describe this further.
As Jean Giraud
- Blueberry (29 volumes, English translation, 1965 - ), artist (all vol), writer vol 25-29
- Jim Cutlass (7 volumes, 1979–1999), artist vol. 1, writer vol 2-7
- XIII (volume 18, La Version irlandaise in 2007), artist
- Marshall Blueberry (3 volumes, 2000), writer
- Le Cristal Majeur (3 volumes, 1986–1990), writer (artist: Bati), Paris: Dargaud
As Moebius
- Le Bandard fou (English translation, 1975), writer & artist
- Arzach (English translation, 1976), writer & artist
- L'Homme est-il bon? (English translation, 1977), writer & artist
- Le Garage Hermétique (The Airtight Garage, English translation, 1976–1980), writer & artist
- Les Yeux du Chat (1978), artist
- Tueur de monde (1979), writer & artist
- l'Incal (The Incal, 6 volumes, English translation, 1981–1988), artist
- Les Maîtres du temps (1982), artist
- Venise céleste (1984), writer & artist
- Le Monde d'Edena (1985–2001), writer & artist
- Altor (7 volumes, 1986 - ), writer
- Silver Surfer: Parable (Originally in English, 1988–1989), artist
- Escale sur Pharagonescia (1989), writer & artist
- The Long Tomorrow (Originally in English, 1989), artist
- Les Vacances du Major (1992), writer & artist
- Le Coeur couronné (The Crowned Heart, English translation, 1992), artist
- Les Histoires de Monsieur Mouche (1994), artist
- Griffes d'Ange (1994), artist
- Little Nemo (1994), writer
- Ballades (1 volume, 1995), artist
- Après l'Incal (2000 - ), artist
- Icare (2005), writer
- Halo Graphic Novel (Originally in English, 2006), artist
Collected editions
Various comics have been collected into trade paperbacks:
- The Collected Fantasies of Jean Giraud (1987–1994):
- Moebius 0 - The Horny Goof & Other Underground Stories (72 pages, Dark Horse, 1990, ISBN 1878574167)
- Moebius ½ - The Early Moebius & Other Humorous Stories (Graphitti Designs, 1992, ISBN 0936211288)
- Moebius 1 - Upon A Star (72 pages, Marvel/Epic, 1987, ISBN 0871352788)
- Moebius 2 – Arzach & Other Fantasy Stories (72 pages, Titan, ISBN 1852860456, Marvel/Epic, 1987)
- Moebius 3 - The Airtight Garage (120 pages, Titan, ISBN 1852860464, Marvel/Epic, 1987)
- Moebius 4 - The Long Tomorrow & Other Science Fiction Stories (70 pages, Marvel/Epic, 1987, ISBN 0871352818)
- Moebius 5 - The Gardens of Aedena (72 pages, Titan, ISBN 1852860472, Marvel/Epic, 1988, ISBN 0871352826)
- Moebius 6 - Pharagonesia & Other Strange Stories (72 pages, Titan, ISBN 1852860480, Marvel/Epic, 1988)
- Moebius 7 - The Goddess (88 pages, Marvel/Epic, 1990, ISBN 0871357143)
- Moebius 8 - Mississippi River (64 pages, Marvel/Epic, 1991, ISBN 0871357151)
- Moebius 9 - Stel (Marvel/Epic, 1994)
- Moebius One - Limited-Signed Edition, Hardcover (266 pages, Graphitti Designs, 1988, ISBN 0936211105)
Film
- Alien (1979)
- The Time Masters (1982)
- Tron (1982)
- Masters of the Universe (1987)
- Willow (1988)
- The Abyss (1989)
- Little Nemo: Adventures in Slumberland
- The Fifth Element (1997)
- The Jodorowsky Constellation (1994) - He talks about his collaboration with Alexandro Jodorowsky on the mega film project Dune and on the comic strip the Incal. During the psycho-genealogical session that concludes the film, he also impersonates the father of the film maker Louis Mouchet.
- Mister Gir & Mike S. Blueberry (1999) - A documentary portrait by Canadian filmmaker Damian Pettigrew produced by the Centre National de la Bande Dessinée in Angoulême, France. Giraud does numerous sketches and watercolors of his most famous creation, Blueberry, travels to Saint Malo for the celebrated comic-book festival, visits his Paris editor Dargaud, and in the film's last sequence, does a spontaneous life-size portrait in real time of Geronimo on a huge sheet of glass using a felt-tipped pen.
- Fellini: I'm a Born Liar (2002) - Giraud conceived the poster for the documentary's 2003 North American release and appears in the DVD bonus extras of the French version.
- Blueberry (2004) - On the DVD extras Giraud talks about the comic, the film etc., dressed in period costume, apparently having done a cameo role in the film. At IMDB, Giraud is credited as a writer and uncredited actor in the film.
- Thru the Moebius Strip (2005)
- Giraud worked on Alejandro Jodorowsky's film adaptation of Dune which was never completed.
- Giraud's artwork for the Dan O'Bannon short story comic "The Long Tomorrow" was a key visual reference for Blade Runner.
- Giraud represented the jury of the Paris Storyboard Contest 2005 (Concours SOPADIN - Société Parisienne des Images Nouvelles) and awarded the two young artists and filmmakers "K-Michel Parandi" (Kay Parandi) & "Jean François Guillon" for their work on the futuristic and experimental film "Minuit 14". Jean Giraud was assisted on this by the notorious French director "Gerard Krawczyk" (Taxi, Fanfan la tulipe).
- Giraud also shared "Story by" credit on the animated film Little Nemo: Adventures in Slumberland.
Video games
- Fade to Black cover art (1995)
- Panzer Dragoon (1995)
- Pilgrim: Faith as a Weapon (1998)
- An arcade and bar based on Giraud's work, called The Airtight Garage, was one of the original main attractions at the Metreon in San Francisco when the complex opened in 1999. It included three original games: Quaternia, a first-person shooter networked between terminals and based on the concept of "junctors" from Major Fatal and The Airtight Garage; a virtual reality bumper cars game about mining asteroids; and Hyperbowl, an obstacle course bowling game incorporating very little overtly Moebius imagery. The arcade was closed and reopened as "Portal One", retaining much of the Moebius-based decor and Hyperbowl but eliminating the other originals in favor of more common arcade games.
Awards
- 1973: Shazam Award, Best Foreign Comic Series, for Lieutenant Blueberry
- 1975: Yellow Kid Award, Lucca, Italy, Best Foreign Artist [13]
- 1977: Angoulême International Comics Festival Best French Artist
- 1979: Adamson Award, for Lieutenant Blueberry etc.
- 1980: Yellow Kid Award, Lucca, Italy, Best Foreign Author [14]
- 1980: Grand Prix de la Science Fiction Française, Special Prize, for Major Fatal [15]
- 1981: Angoulême International Comics Festival Grand Prix de la ville d'Angoulême
- 1985: Angoulême International Comics Festival Grand Prix for the graphic arts
- 1986: Inkpot Award
- 1988: Harvey Award, Best American Edition of Foreign Material, for Moebius album series
- 1989: Eisner Award, Best Finite Series, for Silver Surfer
- 1989: Harvey Award, Best American Edition of Foreign Material, for Incal
- 1991: Eisner Award, Best Single Issue, for Concrete
- 1991: Harvey Award, Best American Edition of Foreign Material, for Lieutenant Blueberry
- 1997: Designated finalist for induction into the Harvey Award Jack Kirby Hall of Fame in 1989, inducted in 1997
- 1997: World Fantasy Award: Artist category
- 1998: Included in the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame
- 2000: Max & Moritz Prizes, Special Prize for outstanding life’s work
- 2001: Haxtur Award Best Long Comic Strip, for The Crowned Heart
Further reading
Notes
References
External links
World Fantasy Award for Best Artist |
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1975–1979 |
Lee Brown Coye (1975) · Frank Frazetta (1976) · Roger Dean (1977) · Lee Brown Coye (1978) · Alicia Austin (1979, tie) · Dale Enzenbacher (1979, tie)
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1980–1989 |
Don Maitz (1980) · Michael Whelan (1981) · Michael Whelan (1982) · Michael Whelan (1983) · Stephen Gervais (1984) · Edward Gorey (1985) · Jeff Jones (1986, tie) · Thomas Canty (1986, tie) · Robert Gould (1987) · J. K. Potter (1988) · Edward Gorey (1989)
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1990–1999 |
Thomas Canty (1990) · Dave McKean (1991) · Tim Hildebrandt (1992) · James Gurney (1993) · Alan M. Clark (1994, tie) · J. K. Potter (1994, tie) · Jacek Yerka (1995) · Gahan Wilson (1996) · Moebius (Jean Giraud) (1997) · Alan Lee (1998) · Charles Vess (1999)
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2000–2009 |
Jason Van Hollander (2000) · Shaun Tan (2001) · Allen Koszowski (2002) · Thomas Kidd (2003) · Donato Giancola (2004, tie) · Jason Van Hollander (2004, tie) · John Picacio (2005) · James Jean (2006) · Shaun Tan (2007) · Edward Miller (Les Edwards) (2008) · Shaun Tan (2009)
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Persondata |
Name |
Giraud, Jean Henri Gaston |
Alternative names |
Moebius (pseudonym) |
Short description |
French comics artist |
Date of birth |
May 8, 1938 |
Place of birth |
Nogent-sur-Marne, Val-de-Marne |
Date of death |
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Place of death |
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