Belgium and Luxembourg (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(WallPaper) #1
A PORTRAIT OF BELGIUM AND LUXEMBOURG 25

PEYO AND THE SMURFS


Best known for The Smurfs,
Peyo (1928–92) was also a
member of the team behind
the Spirou journal that pub-
lished his poetic medieval
series Johan et Pirlouit in



  1. The Smurfs appeared
    as characters here – tiny blue
    people whose humorous
    foibles soon eclipsed any
    interest in the strip’s
    main characters.
    Reacting to their
    popularity, Peyo
    created a strip solely
    about them. Set in
    the Smurf village,
    these stories were
    infused with satirical
    social comment. The
    Smurfs went on to
    become a craze
    between 1983 and 1985, and
    were featured in advertizing
    and merchandizing of every
    type. They spawned a fea-
    ture-length film, television
    cartoons and popular music,
    and had several hit records.


WILLY VANDERSTEEN


While the artists of Spirou
and Tintin filled the French-
language journals, Willy
Vandersteen (1913–90) domi-
nated the Dutch market. His
popular creation, Suske en


COMIC STRIP
ART TODAY

Comic strips, known as
beeldverhaal or bandes
dessinées, continue to be
published in Belgium in all
their forms. In news-
papers, children’s
comics and graphic
novels the “ninth
art” remains one of
the country’s biggest
exports. The high
standards and imag-
inative scope of a
new generation
of artists, such as
Schuiten or Marvano,
have fed growing consumer
demand for comic books.
Both French and Dutch

STREET ART

There are currently 30 large
comic strip images decorat-
ing the sides of buildings
around Brussels’s city centre.
This outdoor exhibition is
known as the Comic Strip
Route and is organized by
the Belgian Centre for Comic
Strip Art, or the Centre Belge
de la Bande Dessineé (see
p62), and by the city of
Brussels. Begun in 1991 as a
tribute to Belgium’s talent for
comic strip art, this street art
project continues to grow. A
free map of the route is avail-
able from tourist information
offices, as well as from the
comic museum itself.

Suske en Wiske by Vandersteen The Smurfs by Peyo A contemporary cartoon strip by Schuiten


Contemporary comic strip artists
at work in their studio

publishers issue over 22
million comic books a year.
Belgian cartoons are sold
in more than 30 countries.

Larger-than-life cartoon by Frank
Pé adorning a Brussels building

During the 1960s, the idea of
the comic strip being the
“ninth art” (after the seventh
and eighth – film and televi-
sion) expanded to include
adult themes in the form of
the comic-strip graphic novel.


Wiske has been translated
into English, appearing as Bob
and Bobette in the UK and as
Willy and Wanda in the US.
The main characters are a pair
of “ordinary” kids between
10 and 14 years of age who
have extraordinary adven-
tures all over the world, and
also travel back and forth in
time. Today, Vandersteen’s
books sell in their millions.

Modern cover
by Marvano
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