Émile Bravo

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Spirou at a comics festival in Strasbourg
in 2009

Émile Bravo (born 18 September 1964) is a

French comics
artist.

Biography

Émile Bravo was born in Paris in 1964 from Spanish parents (a Catalan father and a Valencian mother).

Astérix and The Adventures of Tintin, he wanted to become a comics creator. After his studies, he started working for the magazine Marie-France and as an illustrator, before publishing his first comic book in 1990. It was written by Jean Regnaud, with whom he would collaborate on multiple occasions over the next decades.[2]

In 1992, he became a member of the "Atelier Nawak" (later the

David B., and Christophe Blain.[3] There he met and advised Marjane Satrapi.[4]

Bibliography

  • Ivoire
written by Jean Regnaud, Atomium, 1990; translated in Dutch
  • Aleksis Strogonov
3 albums, with Jean Regnaud, 1993-1998
  • Épatantes aventures de Jules
6 albums at Dargaud, from 2000 on, winner of the 2002 Angoulême International Comics Festival René Goscinny award for the second album La Réplique Inattendue, from 2001
  • The Seven Squat Bears
Three albums, originally published between 2004 and 2009. Translated in English as Goldlocks and the Seven Squat Bears, Orbit, 2010; The Hunger of the Seven Squat Bears, Orbit, 2011; and Beauty and the Squat Bears, Orbit, 2011. Nominated for the 2012
Eisner Awards
in the category Best Publication for Early Readers (up to age 7)
  • Ma maman est en Amérique, elle a rencontré Buffalo Bill,
    Gallimard
    , 2007; translated as My Mommy Is in America and She Met Buffalo Bill, Ponet Mon, 2009
written by Jean Regnaud; named one of the five Angoulême International Comics Festival Essentials, and nominated for the 2007 Prix Saint-Michel for Youth Comics and the 2010 Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis for children's books; also translated in Spanish, German and Dutch
  • Spirou et Fantasio
    : Journal d'un ingénu
    , Dupuis, 2008
winner of the
Marols

Notes

  1. ^ Jimenez, Jesus (4 December 2011). "Émile Bravo: "Quería desmitificar a Spirou"" (in Spanish). RTVE. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  2. ^ Le Saux, Laurence (4 May 2008). "Dans l'atelier d'Emile Bravo". BoDoï (in French). Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  3. ^ Nebreda, Marcos (14 August 2010). "Émile Bravo, un defensor del carácter formativo del cómic infantil". El Mundo (in Spanish). Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  4. .

External links