Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Angoulême International Comics Festival (French: Festival international de la bande dessinée d'Angoulême) is the second largest comics festival in Europe after the Lucca Comics & Games in Italy, and the third biggest in the world after Lucca Comics & Games and the Comiket of Japan.
Bone: La couronne d’aiguilles by Jeff Smith (Delcourt) Bouncer (bande dessinée) : La vengeance du manchot by François Boucq and Alexandro Jodorowsky (Les Humanoïdes Associés) Lupus (bande dessinée) part 3 by Frederik Peeters ; Pascin: La java bleue by Joann Sfar (l’Association) Théodore Poussin: Les jalousies by Frank Le Gall
The Grand Prix de la ville d'Angoulême is a lifetime achievement award given annually during the Angoulême International Comics Festival to a comics author. Although not a monetary award, it is considered the most prestigious award in Franco-Belgian comics .
2000: Christian comic award: La Bible by Jeff Anderson and Mike Maddox, Pre-au Clerc; 2001: Oecumenic jury award: Le Journal de mon père part 3 by Jiro Taniguchi, Casterman; 2002: Oecumenic jury award: Amours Fragiles: Le dernier printemps by Jean-Michel Beuriot and Philippe Richelle, Casterman
Won the Alph-Art Jeunesse 9–12 ans at Angoulême International Comics Festival. 1998 for Trolls de Troy T.1 : Histoires trolles; 2000 for Lanfeust de Troy T.7 : Les pétaures se cachent pour mourir [3] 2002 for Trolls de Troy T.5 : Les Maléfices de la Thaumaturge; Prix jeunesse at la Foire du livre de Saint-Louis in 2011 for Lord of Burger
In 1989, as the whole award ceremony was renamed after Hergé's unfinished book Alph-Art, this prize became the Alph-Art coup de cœur and was awarded to authors with up to three published works. From 2003-2006 the award was again called Best First Album ( meilleur premier album ), then in 2007 was renamed the "Prix Révélation", which is ...
The most famous, prestigious and largest one is the "Festival international de la bande dessinée d'Angoulême" (English: "Angoulême International Comics Festival"), an annual festival begun in 1974, in Angoulême, France, and the format has been adopted in other European countries as well, unsurprisingly perhaps considering the popularity the ...
In 1984, Groensteen became the editor-in-chief of the old fanzine Schtroumpf : Les Cahiers de la bande dessinée, transforming it into one of the first publications that would lead to serious academic criticism of comics in France and beyond. He integrated the publishing company into discussions on art and culture.