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Tutta
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Posted - 09/03/2016 : 09:54:17  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
The PaperMan

by Milo Manara


Cover:

.....


.....


.....





....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................


..... 8&9


..... 10&11


..... 12&13


..... 14&15


..... 16&17


..... 18&19


..... 20&21


..... 22&23


..... 24&25


..... 26&27


..... 28&29


..... 30&31


..... 32&33


..... 34&35


..... 36&37


..... 38&39


..... 40&41


..... 42&43


..... 44&45


..... 46&47


..... 48&49


..... 50&51


..... 52&53


(END)



More: MILO MANARA
http://forum.stripovi.com/topic.asp?whichpage=-1&TOPIC_ID=48880&REPLY_ID=

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Edited by - Tutta on 18/02/2020 08:23:42
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Tutta
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Posted - 09/03/2016 : 09:55:41  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Matthias Schultheiss



Info:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthias_Schultheiss


(Die Haie von Lagos)










....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................








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Edited by - Tutta on 13/02/2020 09:46:38
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Tutta
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Posted - 09/03/2016 : 09:56:13  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
MARIE - JIM (THIERRY TERRASSON -TÉHY)






...




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Edited by - Tutta on 13/02/2020 09:51:13
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Tutta
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Posted - 12/03/2016 : 23:20:01  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
ALEXANDRA TS


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Edited by - Tutta on 17/02/2020 09:47:53
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Tutta
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Posted - 14/03/2016 : 08:22:15  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
MISTY

AN ADULT FANTASY IN VISUALS by J. McQUADE





Published: 1972


Misty is a Blonde haired, green eyed, 19 year old actress living in Calivada Empire.
The world of Misty is run by the I.D.M or International Destiny Machine
and its humanoid/robot representative GODD.
Misty is a free spirit especially in her love life, something totally forbidden by the I.D.M.
and/or GODD. Only it can tell people who to marry or have sex with.
The I.D.M. also charts a persons life and appoints ones life function,
keeping track of eveyone through braclets all must ware. Misty flagrant pursuit of her
own libido brings her into conflict with those in power and she becomes a fugitive.
On the run from the authoraties a.k.a C.D.L. Censorship Death Legion commanded by sycophant
Kleezie and GODD's girl Friday, Mary. Misty encounters a old wizard
like character Le Bouq who uses technology that keeps her from aging past 19.
In addition he gives her "The Sun Jewel" which allows her to increase her mental powers to
control GODD's war/liquidation machines, breathe underwater and other abilites.
As the story progesses Misty becomes a symbol of rebellion to those seeking to go with their feelings
rather than following the computer tyrannts orders/calculations. All this while being the
sexual desire of MANY. Sometimes willingly, sometimes not!
In the end she is something of a messianic figure who must ultimately confront and defeat
the despotic GODD. IT IS AN 'ADULT' TALE.
With all that that implise. Lots of illustrated Sex and Nudity, little if any profanity however.

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Edited by - Tutta on 17/02/2020 09:49:57
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Tutta
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Posted - 14/03/2016 : 08:32:09  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Lara Croft


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Edited by - Tutta on 17/02/2020 09:52:21
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Tutta
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Posted - 14/03/2016 : 09:08:11  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
MARA by C. Ferri



Publisher: Tabou
Released: 2011 -
Drawings: Ferri Cosimo
Text: Ferri Cosimo
Genre: Erotic
Country of origin: France


Content:

Mara, 29, is mystery writer, passionate about unsolved cases.
To carry out its editorial projects she investigates and often exposes the perpetrator.
But it is here that reveals the dark side of the pretty young woman: Having no confidence in the justice of men,
she decided to be God's hands and punish the culprit itself. Beautiful and uninhibited,
she knows very well attract prey to the web it weaves throughout the story.
Where does this thirst for justice? What test may well turn a cheerful young woman,
talented and pretty grim executor? Probably a secret she hides in the depths
of his memory.

....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................


Vol. 1 - La Folie Lucide

HC / 46 pages (02/2011)



Vol. 2 - Le Théâtre de l'Innocence Perdue

HC / 46 pages (01/2013)



Vol. 3 - L'Effrayant visage de la Vérité

HC / 46 pages (01/2014)



Vol. 4 - Les Larmes de l'oubli

HC / 46 pages (02/2016)


Vol. 5 - La main de Dieu



....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................


Sample:




.....

....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................


COSIMO FERRI




Home:
http://www.comicsworld.it/ferri/


MELODIE


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Edited by - Tutta on 18/02/2020 08:46:10
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Tutta
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Posted - 14/03/2016 : 09:52:05  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
MORGANA LE FEY



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Edited by - Tutta on 17/02/2020 09:56:11
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Tutta
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Posted - 18/03/2016 : 20:00:00  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
...

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Edited by - Tutta on 16/02/2020 08:20:01
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Tutta
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Posted - 18/03/2016 : 20:05:52  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
...

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Edited by - Tutta on 17/02/2020 09:56:46
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Tutta
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Posted - 19/03/2016 : 11:58:43  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Episode 84: Sex in Comics



Home:
https://comicsverse.com/episode-84-sex-in-comics/

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Edited by - Tutta on 18/02/2020 23:49:22
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Tutta
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Posted - 19/03/2016 : 12:02:24  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
7 Ludicrous Superhero Sex Scenes You Could Only Find in Comics


by TRISTAN COOPER





Home:
http://www.dorkly.com/post/74601/comic-book-sex-scenes-part-2

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Edited by - Tutta on 18/02/2020 23:51:03
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Tutta
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Posted - 20/03/2016 : 16:30:29  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Yuji Moriguchi / Affair in the Afternoon



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Edited by - Tutta on 20/02/2020 09:01:46
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Tutta
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Posted - 20/03/2016 : 16:44:26  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
The Alibi by Horacio Altuna






....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................


1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

(END)


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Edited by - Tutta on 20/02/2020 08:53:22
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Tutta
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Alice in Wonderland by Riverstone



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Edited by - Tutta on 19/02/2020 20:03:57
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Tutta
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Posted - 22/03/2016 : 10:38:10  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
...

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Edited by - Tutta on 19/02/2020 20:04:31
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Tutta
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Posted - 25/03/2016 : 20:42:36  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Le best of des 100 plus belles planches de BD érotique

Home:
http://www.huffingtonpost.fr/vincent-berniere/bd-erotique-planches-explications_b_8768978.html


BD érotique

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Edited by - Tutta on 25/03/2016 20:43:03
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Tutta
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Posted - 26/03/2016 : 20:16:14  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
A. Biffignandi


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Edited by - Tutta on 19/02/2020 20:06:37
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Tutta
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Wonder Woman (Luis Royo) 26 cm




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Edited by - Tutta on 19/02/2020 20:08:01
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Tutta
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BLACK KISS



Publisher: Panini Comics (Panini Verlag) Germany
Released: August 2014 - Appears yet
Drawings: Howard Chaykin
Text: Howard Chaykin
Format: Paperback (17,9 x 26,8 cm) - Monochrome
Genre: Eroticism / Crime
Country of origin: USA





Howard Chaykin
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_Chaykin


Content: Jazz musician Cass Pollack is on the run. The mafia is after him that the police anyway.
Then one last chance to turn everything to the good: sex and pornography , the Vatican 're in the midst.
And ... vampires ? With his horror sex thriller brought warhorse Howard Chaykin (American Flagg!)
The Sittenwächter 25 years ago on the palm, and when recently released the sequel, there were again problems
with censorship. BLACK KISS is a classic from the poison cabinet of US comics.
In planning for Comic Action 2014: Invitation by Howard Chaykin and slipcase for volumes 1 & 2!
The ultimate edition of Howard Chaykins scandal classics!

The consisting of twelve episodes second part of the fearless vampire porn epic directed by exceptional artist
and provocateur Howard Chaykin spans the globe and takes the reader through a century full of wild debauchery
sexual and violent nature. In BLACK KISS 2 shows the Maestro uncompromising than ever before.


....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................


Vol. 1 - Original Issue: Black kiss 1-12



HC / 140 pages



Vol. 2 -



HC / 180 pages




Sample: Vol. 1 & 2



....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................


Black Kiss (Erotik | Sex | Comic)



....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................




Wiki:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Kiss

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Edited by - Tutta on 20/02/2020 09:16:56
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Tutta
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Germany
32401 Posts

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Posted - 31/03/2016 : 09:44:26  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote

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Edited by - Tutta on 20/02/2020 09:14:22
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Tutta
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Posted - 31/03/2016 : 09:48:47  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
FELINA / Annie Goetzinger & Victor Mora





Info:
http://www.coolfrenchcomics.com/felina.htm





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Edited by - Tutta on 12/02/2020 08:34:55
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Tutta
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La Grande Dame Annie Goetzinger (1951-2017)

BY CYNTHIA ROSE JAN 05, 2018





(Annie Goetzinger in 2017, courtesy Dargaud)


The French artist Annie Goetzinger, who died on December 20 at the age of 66, could never remember a time when she wasn't drawing.
"The moment I could talk, I asked for paper and a pencil and whatever I drew was a story with a theme."

As soon as she learned to read, Goetzinger devoured comics. She loved the illustrés of the 1950s and 1960s, then becoming known as bandes dessinées.
But it never occurred to the young Annie that she could create one. Even at the magazines which were aimed at little girls – the likes of La Semaine de Suzette,
Lisette, and Ames vaillantes – making Francophone comics and cartoons was a male domain.

Nevertheless, 2017 marked Goetzinger's forty-fifth year in the profession. Last March, she published Les Apprentissages de Colette, a snapshot of the famous
author's difficult and decisive youth. Like her 2013 album about Christian Dior (Jeune fille en Dior, published in English in 2015 as The Girl in Dior) or her 2011 fantasy
Marie Antoinette, la reine fantôme (Marie Antoinette, Phantom Queen, 2016), it will appear in English this summer.




(Annie Goetzinger, 2013, from Jeune fille en Dior)


Goetzinger's path was less tortuous than those of her heroines, but she too made history. As she told the women who organized the anti-sexist comics
collective to which she belonged, "Over time, I've pretty much seen and heard it all." Tributes to her, including those by the collective (BD Egalité, Female
Comics Creators Against Sexism), have united to acknowledge Goetzinger's role as a "grande dame of the bande dessinée."

But, as friends and fellow pioneers like Florence Cestac have asked, why were these accolades withheld until her death? Why consecrate her achievements
only after she is gone? Their anger recalls the moment, exactly two years ago, when Angoulême's International Comics Festival put forward thirty men – and
not one woman – for its prestigious Grand Prize.

Female artists of every age reacted with fury. But the catastrophe exposed something central: just how much BD history is still buried. The famous "golden age"
of Franco-Belgian comics was an all-male epoch and one that started to change only during the 1970s. That shift was due to a small group of innovators, women
such as Claire Brétecher, Chantal Montellier, Jeanne Puchol, Nicole Claveloux, … and Annie Goetzinger.

Women had never been totally absent from Francophone comics. But, over decades, their role in the industry mirrored the place they held in society. So they worked
as men's colourists, secretaries and assistants.

Bécassine, often considered comics' first female protagonist, was conceived – but not drawn – by a female editor. She was Jeanne-Joséphine Spallarossa, known to
her readers as "Jacqueline Rivière." But what was true for Spallarossa went for every one of her sex: their editorial work was limited to the juvenile press.

In this realm, the publications for adolescent males (Le Journal of Tintin, Spirou, Coeurs vaillants, etc) launched careers like those of Hergé, Jijé, and Franquin.
But for a creative female, there was nothing similar. All the magazines where women worked had an inflexible brief: they were supposed to educate supportive,
obedient wives. During the decade Goetzinger turned twenty, all that changed.

The artist was born in Paris' 20th arrondisement, historically a bastion of the working class. "I come from a family of woodworkers and dressmakers," she told the
eminent BD historian Gilles Ratier. "They were all artisans, people who loved their work, who started out with nothing and made it into something… But
they were also people who loved books and cared about culture." One of her great aunts made haute couture at Maison Lanvin and most of Annie's clothes were designed
and sewn by her grandmother.

Goetzinger intended to follow in their footsteps. She won a place in textile studies at L'École Duperré, then known as the L'École Supérieure des arts appliqués. A
product of the movement to emancipate women, the school was focused on creative job training. In 1970, it merged with a pair of institutions for men and it has
produced bédéistes such as Killoffer, David B, Sylvain Chomet (The Triplets of Belleville), Julie Wauters of the Troglodyte collective, Juliette Mancini, and Elsa Abderhamani.

When Goetzinger arrived in 1967, not a single class she took was mixed. But the school's curriculum, which she later called "rather progressive" required a study of the bande
dessinée. This course was run by Georges Pichard – an auteur known primarily for his erotic comics.

Pichard had each of his students create an actual comic and Goetzinger decided to tell the story of Amélie Élie. Élie, a prostitute of the Belle Époque, had been a colourful
legend in the student's quartier. Known as Casque d'Or – "Goldilocks" – for her shining hair, Élie was at the heart of a war between two gangs. In 1952, Jacques Becker
made a movie about her. But, as a student, Goetzinger had never seen it.




(Annie Goetzinger, 1976, Casque d'Or, original album)


Two artists featured in that jury which evaluated her pages. One was scriptwriter Jacques Lob, who later created Superdupont for Gotlib. The other was Fred
(Frédéric Aristidès), author of a popular strip called Philémon. Fifteen years later, Lob would receive Angouleme's Grand Prize. But, within a year, he was asking
Goetzinger to draw his work.

Goetzinger always credited Pichard's class with changing her life. "As a form, the bande dessinée spoke to me straightaway. It was a way of telling stories I
found extremely moving."

By 1972, however, she was a penniless graduate – so Goetzinger rented a room and started to pound the pavements. (Because her landlady turned out to be
a militant feminist, drawing political posters brought her a break on the rent.) Then a female editor at Lisette accepted her comic "Fleur" and, through Lob, she
found work at Pilote.

Four years after Goetzinger left school, Légende et realité de Casque d’Or was serialized; in 1976, it appeared as an album. The Angoulême Festival named the
artist its Meilleur Espoir ("Best Hope") and voted Casque d'Or the "Best French Realist Work." That award is now the Fauve d'Or or year's Best Album.

To modern eyes, a flip through Casque d'Or comes as a shock. It is filled with the era's garish colors and love of Art Nouveau, and the louche carnality of its
characters feels more earnest than earthy. The editor who commissioned it, Henri Filippini, describes it as "an album of apprenticeship." But, as he also notes,
everything that made its author's long career is already present. Casque d'Or demonstrates Goetzinger's love of setting scenes, her taste for historic dress and
décor and her insistence on a female point of view.

The author followed Élie's story with Aurore, a life of the cross-dressing novelist George Sand (1804-1876). With a text by the writer Adela Turin, the album won
First Prize at the Bologna Book Fair. This was the world's most important market for children's literature but the project had not been a happy one. "I did it for
L'Edition des femmes," Goetzinger told Gilles Ratier, "who were a women's publishing house. But they turned out to be one of the worst publishers I ever
encountered. Not only did they lack any humor or perspective, all of them were totally preoccupied by 'the message.' So I had no freedom… and I got no author's rights."

From then on, when it came to collaboration, Goetzinger trusted her instincts. This brought her a life whose creative partnerships endured for decades. Having
entered a world where men held the power, dominated the visions and usually reaped the big rewards, she proved herself not just an equal but a highly creative
partner. The addition of her frankly female point-of-view, plus Goetzinger's interest in rigorous research, often brought stories a different reach and depth.

Teamwork was integral to Goetzinger's universe. Her first important collaborator was Spanish author Victor Mora, who she met in the office at Pilote. With Mora,
she created the exploits of Felina, the cat-suited offspring of a Spanish anarchist and a nun. Their three-volume fantasy follows this vigilante as she tracks the
mysterious figure who ordered her husband's death. It was Goetzinger's first popular success.





The next decade brought her a second crucial colleague. This was Pierre Christin, already the co-author of a bestseller, Valerian. That series of space
stories, which influenced Star Wars, had introduced Laureline – one of French comics' first adult females. Laureline's only real predecessors are Barbarella
(1962; 1964) and Guy Peellaert's erotic, doll-like Jodelle (1967).

Christin and Goetzinger would break new ground of their own, starting in 1980 with La Demoiselle de la Legion d'Honneur. This story begins when its protagonist's
parents are killed in French Indochina. Young Aline Erckmann is then sent back to France, to be housed and schooled in a Maison de la Legion d'Honneur.

Such maisons are actual government homes for veterans' children, established in 1805 by Napoleon. After their repressive schooling, Aline's trajectory depends
upon the men she meets. She marries a captain whose far-right views take her couple to Africa, where he is working as a mercenary. Here, Aline becomes a
witness to female circumcision, takes a lover, loses him and then loses her spouse. Still conservative but also restless and bored, she travels with another paramour
to Cuba, Argentina and, finally, to the America which is at war with Vietnam. There an epiphany sends her back to late-'60s France, keen to save her son from the
bourgeois life she once embraced.

The book's publication caused a genuine scandal. At the time, the Legion d'Honneur and its very real maisons was headed by the late Charles de Gaulle's son-in-law.
Goetzinger received an in-person rebuke and publisher Georges Dargaud almost lost his own Legion d'Honneur. But the rebellious authors remained unrepentant and,
for over three decades, they explored similar stories.




(Annie Goetzinger & Pierre Christin, 1985, La Voyageuse de la Petite Ceinture)


The year after La Demoiselle they published La Diva et le Kriegspiel, which dramatizes collaboration with the Nazis. In 1985, their La Voyageuse de la petite
ceinture followed Naima, an immigrant fleeing the marriage arranged by her family. They went on to look at things like the life of working girls in fashion
(Charlotte and Nancy, 1987), the debits of modern communication (Le message du simple, 1994) and the legacy of British colonialism (The White Sultana, 1996).

Christin and Goetzinger also created the series L'Agence Hardy, a 1950s-set retro romp that stars a girl detective. Their 1989 Le Tango de disparu, about
disappearances under Argentina's junta, is seen as one of the first graphic novels.

From Casque d'Or to Jeune fille en Dior, Goetzinger continued to script scenarios of her own. She also wrote and drew erotic tales, the first of which appeared in
1974 in Le Canard sauvage. Some of these – also published in L'Echo des Savannes and les Humanoïdes Associés' Fripon series – have scripts by Rodolphe Jacquette,
Serge Le Tendre, or Jacques Lob's wife, Couetsch Bousset. But Cinéma du quartier ("Neighborhood Moviehouse"), Ruban bleu ("Blue Ribbon") and Le Lingère amoureuse
("The Smitten Chambermaid") were each written and drawn by Goetzinger. Via the anthology Eros Gone Wild, several such works have appeared in English.




(Annie Goetzinger & Pierre Christin, 1986, L'Agence Hardy, courtesy BDzoom and Gilles Ratier)


In 1992, Goetzinger was approached by the German writer Andreas Knigge and a Norwegian poet, Jón Sveinbjørn Jónsson, to create a story called L'Avenir perdu (The Lost Future). Except for one comic – Jo, created the year before by Dérib – this was the first BD to deal with AIDS from a gay perspective. Even today, it is considered among the best.

Despite her colossal output, Goetzinger's work was not confined to comics. She also illustrated books, designed for the theatre and drew for the daily press. From 1999 until a fortnight before she died, she supplied the images for a weekly column in the paper La Croix.




(Annie Goetzinger, Andreas C. Knigge & Jón Sveinbjørn Jónsson, 1992, L'Avenir perdu)


That column is written by Bruno Frappat, formerly a supervising editor at Le Monde. It was Frappat who, in 1985, published a famous manifesto
entitled Navrant ("Shameful"). In it, four leading dessinatrices – Chantal Montellier, Jeanne Puchol, Florence Cestac, and Nicole Claveloux – denounced
the misogyny of the comics around them. Despite progress having been made in the 1970s, they felt graphic humor had once again become "macho,"
"pornographic," and "infantile."

Goetzinger was not among the signatories. But she always acknowledged a female artist's world was harder. "This has never been an easy job to practice
– never. You have to have tenacity and nothing is ever guaranteed. Success or not, the next album is always there in front of you." During the controversy
of 2016, Le Monde called to ask her: Was there really such a thing as "the female bande dessinée?"

Of course there was, Goetzinger replied, and what about it? What was wrong in acknowledging – or privileging – female perceptions?

The role of the grandes dames like Goetzinger is enormous. But some of their contributions are more easily seen than others. Claire Brétecher made her
era into a comedy of manners: a fresh genre that is graphically droll and linguistically brilliant. Florence Cestac worked to change not only comic perspectives
but how bandes dessinées are published. Chantal Montellier's views about storytelling were and remain an expression of her radical politics – and, with the
annual Prix Artemisia, she has ensured they will be remembered.

Goetzinger's legacy might appear more minimal. Little of her work ever made it into English and much of it is effectively out of print. Many of the moments
it was addressing are forgotten. So is the fact that, as one critic wrote, "When Annie Goetzinger started out, many readers were shocked that a man and
woman could even make a comic together."




(Annie Goetzinger, poster artwork for her retrospective at the 2014 BD Boum festival)


In fact, her work was critical. Goetzinger's lasting importance resides not in her style or politics – it derives from her very existence and example. When
there was only a handful of women to watch, she showed what could come of painstaking research and careful choices. For her, the key to retrieving any
past was always a person, an individual with a specific imagination. She helped win us access to worlds as different as those of Chloe Cruchaudet's Mauvais
Genre (2013), Agnes Maupré's Chevalier d'Eon (2014), Penelope Bagieu's California Dreamin' (2015), Virginie Augustin and Hubert's Monsieur Désire? (2016),
and Isadora by Julie Birmant and Clément Oubrerie (2017).

If Goetzinger favoured stories about women, they include not just the powerful but also the passive. She depicted fewer heroines and "role models" than she
did individual, ordinary females. Her work depicts public servants and prostitutes, performers and militants, envious workmates and wartime traitors. While some
of these are victims of their circumstances, others our defeated by their own self-regard. Goetzinger also gave us characters like Aline – unequipped to analyze those
lives they are living.

Annie Goetzinger's great accomplishment was simply that she worked, worked with an unfailing skill and curiosity. She made comics her job – just as men had done,
without a thought, for decades. In 2014 she told Gilles Ratier, "I love the past because of certain events in my life. But I never wallow in it; I avoid nostalgia. Having
said that, if I'm stuck in the pigeonhole of 'comics history,' I'll be fine with that. After all, it's a warm and cozy spot."




(Annie Goetzinger & Pierre Christin, 1980, La Demoiselle de la Legion d'Honneur, courtesy BDzoom and Gilles Ratier)


With special thanks to Gilles Ratier and BDzoom.com.

• Annie Goetzinger's The Girl in Dior and her Marie Antoinette, Phantom Queen are available in English from NBM, which will also publish Provocative Colette.
An English version of Goetzinger and Christin's The White Sultana is also available from Europe Comics. Chloe Cruchaudet's Mauvais Genre is available in English
as Deserter's Masquerade.

• The winner of this year's Prix Artemisia for this year's best BD by a female auteur will be announced on January 9, 2018

+IN HOC SIGNO VINCES+



Edited by - Tutta on 12/02/2020 09:17:51
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Tutta
Advanced Member



Germany
32401 Posts

Member since 19/02/2010

Posted - 08/04/2016 : 14:28:55  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Cercle Vicieux / Coq & Peyret






+IN HOC SIGNO VINCES+



Edited by - Tutta on 12/02/2020 08:30:06
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Tutta
Advanced Member



Germany
32401 Posts

Member since 19/02/2010

Posted - 08/04/2016 : 14:29:26  Show Profile Show Extended Profile  Send Tutta a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Erotik und Pornographie im Comic Strip


Michel Bourgeois



Publisher: Volksverlag (Germany)



Cover:



HC / 154 pages




+IN HOC SIGNO VINCES+



Edited by - Tutta on 12/02/2020 08:24:29
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