François Boucq


Real Name and aliases:

Website:

Country:

France

Character:

Award:

  • 1985: Prix de la critique at the Angoulême International Comics Festival, France,
  • 1986: Best French Comic at the Angoulême International Comics Festival,
  • 1992: nominated for Best German-language Comic/Comic-related Publication at the Max & Moritz Prizes, Germany,
  • 1996: nominated for Best Drawing at the Haxtur Awards, Spain,
  • 1998: Grand Prix de la ville d'Angoulême, France,
  • 2006: Award for Best Drawing at the Albert Uderzo Awards,
  • 2012: Award for Best Artwork at the Prix Saint Michel

Added by: BecomixOfficial. Last edit by: krympling.

Biography

François Boucq (born 28 November 1955 in Lille), is a French comic book artist. He is most famous for his surreal comics revolving around the main character Jérôme Moucherot. Boucq published cartoons in magazines like Le Point or L'Expansion at an early age. Soon, he also created comic albums, becoming famous with Les pionniers de l'aventure humaine. Many more have been published in the meantime, including La Femme du magicien (1986) Bouche du diable (1990) and Little Tulip (2014) with American novelist Jerome Charyn. Boucq created the successful series Face de Lune in cooperation with the artist Alexandro Jodorowsky. 1994 saw the publication of Les dents du recoin, the first album of a series of surreal comics that feature Jérôme Moucherot, a door-to-door insurance salesman with a fountain pen through his nose, who is dressed in a leopard fur suit; his bizarre adventures take place in a world where Smurfs are jungle-dwelling headhunters and sharks swim around in the blue wallpapers of bourgeois living rooms. Boucq later teamed up with Jodorowsky again, creating the graphic novel series Bouncer, set in a bleak Western scenario. In 1998, Boucq was awarded the Grand Prix de la ville d'Angoulême. In keeping with the festival's tradition, he was the president of the jury in the following year.

Artistic production