Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Angoulême International Comics Festival (AICF; 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.
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 .
This Prize Awarded by the Audience - Cultura is awarded to comics authors at the Angoulême International Comics Festival since 1989.. The prize was known as Alph-Art du public from 1989 to 2003, the Prix du public from 2004 to 2006, in 2008 and 2009 the Essentiel FNAC-SNCF, since it was sponsored by the retailer Fnac and railway authority SNCF, in 2010 and 2010 the Fauve Fnac SNCF - Prix du ...
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 ...
The Prize for Inheritance (Prix du patrimoine) is one of the prizes awarded by the Angoulême International Comics Festival. This award recognizes a new French-language edition of great comics from the past. It has been awarded each year since 2004, from a list of 6-8 finalists.
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 ; 2010: Jérôme K. Jérôme Bloche by Alain Dodier (Dupuis) 2011: Il était une fois en France by Fabien Nury and Sylvain Vallée (Glénat)
The Cité internationale de la Bande Dessinée et de l'Image [115] includes an exhibition space and cinema in a converted brewery down by the river. A new museum dedicated to the motion picture opened in 2007 at the newly restored chais on opposite side of the river at Saint Cybard.
1976: Foreign realistic work: Corto Maltese: La Ballade de la mer salée by Hugo Pratt, Casterman 1976: French comical work: Gai-Luron : En écrase méchamment by Gotlib , Vaillant 1976: French realistic work: Le vagabond des limbes : L'empire des soleils noirs by Julio Ribera [ fr ] (artist) and Christian Godard (author) , Dargaud