Tuesday, February 08, 2011
Frankenstein Réassemblé : Séance de dédicace à L' Imaginaire à Québec.
Quatre artistes viennent vous rencontrer le vendredi 11 février de 18h 30 à 20h 30. Trois d'entre eux sont du collectif Frankenstein Réassemblé. Il s'agit de Djief, d'Éric Thériault et de Richard Gagnon.
Ce sera aussi un lancement triple pour Québec puisque Djief lancera aussi son nouvel album au éditions Soleil, Le crépuscule des dieux, tome 5 et de François Lapierre son nouvel album aux éditions Glénat-Québec, Chroniques sauvages.
Vendredi de 18:30 à 20:30
Boutique Imaginaire
3e Étage, Centre d'achat Laurier, Québec
Thursday, February 03, 2011
Un Joual bien Vert !

Ça s'appelle Joual Vert, comme l'illustre mon dessin. Et pour vous attirer à le visiter, voici quelques sujets : les fesses et les cheveux frisés dans la culture Black, des collégienne catholique excitées par les beaux gars, un mariage arrangé, pourquoi faut pas voler de l'eau bénite et l'horreur de la glace quand ce n'est pas dans un drink.....
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Working with Clément Sauvé
On January 26th, 2011, I lost a great friend and an extraordinary artist, a unique inspiration. Clément Sauvé died of a virulent cancer at the age of 33. He left us and nobody will ever fill this emptiness...
***
Summer 2000.
The first memory I have of Clement Sauvé is when I came in to share the studio space where he worked with Yanick Paquette. I think Yanick was interested in saving some money on the rent and wanted to add one more artist. I was looking for some working dynamic that was not the Drawing-table-next-to-the-bed thing. That might not have been the first time I met Clement, but that's the first I remember. A while before that, he was a student in Grégoire Bouchard's comic class at Cegep Du Vieux Montreal (Old Montreal College), and I may have seen him when I was a guest speaker there.
The loft was a thin long industrial space with greasy floors from the heavy machinery that was there when the Grover building was a factory, decades ago. Now it's a coop that rent loft space to artists, mostly.
We had three tables placed next to each other on the same wall. Yanick and Clément were working together on Gambit, then Codename: Knockout and Gen 13. Yanick was the main penciller and Clément was his background artist, also doing technical stuff like guns and spaceships. I was working on my indy comic book: Veena. Behind us on the wall, there was a sort of clothesline, where comics pages were hung. Yanick and Clément basically worked on many pages at the same time, and traded them back and forth. Clément was already a very meticulous and precise designer. His work was beyond what is usually expected of backgrounds in American comics and closer to what is the norm in European bd. In between some of the comic book work, he sometimes did animation design for a client. It's there that I could see the style that he would develop in the years to come. Less realistic, closer to Japanese stylization. But, it was hidden to fit his "master's" style. Yes, because Yanick called Clément, his personal slave ! Anyone else would have been really insulted, but Clément had a very strong and sarcastic sense of humor...he accepted this and even pushed the joke himself, loudly repeating this in conventions, very secure in the power of real work and confident that real compliments are earned.
Behind us, there was a small tv broadcasting bad sitcoms and some of the worst infomercials...an unlimited source of humour for Clem !
***
I'm trying to remember if we ever worked on something together...
Two things come to mind: In 2001, I published a book called Flirt. It was a black and white pin-up book with about 60 artists mainly from Montreal, but also from France, the US and a few other places. While I was at our shared studio, I asked Clément to contribute a piece. He kindly accepted and brought back a sort of android girl standing sideway, looking away with robotic arms. At the time, he was not inking himself. He asked his friend Serge Lapointe, still in Québec City at the time, to do that part. His themes were already apparent in this piece, the military attitude, the huge bolts and underneath all the flesh, a robot. This may be his first published artwork that was signed . At the time, his work with Yanick was uncredited.
The second one is an issue of Terra Obscura. Late in 2003, this is the last issue of the ABC/Wildstorm mini-serie and it's almost late. Deadline crunch come in and every penciller around Yanick Paquette pitches in to save time here and there. I did a full page, a flashback to the forties with the characters in their Nedor era costumes, my wife modeled as the first female black US president, Michel Lacombe did a 2 page spread drawn in the style of Egyptian hieroglyph and Clément was back in his role of background artist doing the toughest thing: one page full of old cars piled on top of each others...The day was saved, the book was on time !
***
Beyond those times where we worked closely together, during the rest of his career where he worked at home and he developed as a natural stylist, I basically saw him in the parties my wife and I did at our apartment, some book launches and his weekly visits at Studio 3265. He biked every week to the comic shop and he came to visit us before or after. Work usually stopped right there.
Clément was the soul of every friend's gathering, people came around to hear him tell anecdotes about the bizz and funny jokes. He had a way with the hyperbolic comparison, analogies so overblown and hysterical.
***
His career had some up and down, and we had a saying about "The Curse of Clement". Temporary difficulties with graphic designers, editors, legal department and such. But when I think about him now, I feel that there was no curse. He had his difficulties like every one, but he just made it interesting while he was telling the story. In fact, he was a winner. Someone who worked real had and earned what he got. In the end, he got a good career, a good reputation, and he also met Dominique ! How could that be "The Curse of Clement" ??
Except the ending, of course.
I'll miss you Clément.
***
Summer 2000.
The first memory I have of Clement Sauvé is when I came in to share the studio space where he worked with Yanick Paquette. I think Yanick was interested in saving some money on the rent and wanted to add one more artist. I was looking for some working dynamic that was not the Drawing-table-next-to-the-bed thing. That might not have been the first time I met Clement, but that's the first I remember. A while before that, he was a student in Grégoire Bouchard's comic class at Cegep Du Vieux Montreal (Old Montreal College), and I may have seen him when I was a guest speaker there.
We had three tables placed next to each other on the same wall. Yanick and Clément were working together on Gambit, then Codename: Knockout and Gen 13. Yanick was the main penciller and Clément was his background artist, also doing technical stuff like guns and spaceships. I was working on my indy comic book: Veena. Behind us on the wall, there was a sort of clothesline, where comics pages were hung. Yanick and Clément basically worked on many pages at the same time, and traded them back and forth. Clément was already a very meticulous and precise designer. His work was beyond what is usually expected of backgrounds in American comics and closer to what is the norm in European bd. In between some of the comic book work, he sometimes did animation design for a client. It's there that I could see the style that he would develop in the years to come. Less realistic, closer to Japanese stylization. But, it was hidden to fit his "master's" style. Yes, because Yanick called Clément, his personal slave ! Anyone else would have been really insulted, but Clément had a very strong and sarcastic sense of humor...he accepted this and even pushed the joke himself, loudly repeating this in conventions, very secure in the power of real work and confident that real compliments are earned.
Behind us, there was a small tv broadcasting bad sitcoms and some of the worst infomercials...an unlimited source of humour for Clem !
***
I'm trying to remember if we ever worked on something together...
Two things come to mind: In 2001, I published a book called Flirt. It was a black and white pin-up book with about 60 artists mainly from Montreal, but also from France, the US and a few other places. While I was at our shared studio, I asked Clément to contribute a piece. He kindly accepted and brought back a sort of android girl standing sideway, looking away with robotic arms. At the time, he was not inking himself. He asked his friend Serge Lapointe, still in Québec City at the time, to do that part. His themes were already apparent in this piece, the military attitude, the huge bolts and underneath all the flesh, a robot. This may be his first published artwork that was signed . At the time, his work with Yanick was uncredited.
The second one is an issue of Terra Obscura. Late in 2003, this is the last issue of the ABC/Wildstorm mini-serie and it's almost late. Deadline crunch come in and every penciller around Yanick Paquette pitches in to save time here and there. I did a full page, a flashback to the forties with the characters in their Nedor era costumes, my wife modeled as the first female black US president, Michel Lacombe did a 2 page spread drawn in the style of Egyptian hieroglyph and Clément was back in his role of background artist doing the toughest thing: one page full of old cars piled on top of each others...The day was saved, the book was on time !
***
Beyond those times where we worked closely together, during the rest of his career where he worked at home and he developed as a natural stylist, I basically saw him in the parties my wife and I did at our apartment, some book launches and his weekly visits at Studio 3265. He biked every week to the comic shop and he came to visit us before or after. Work usually stopped right there.
Clément was the soul of every friend's gathering, people came around to hear him tell anecdotes about the bizz and funny jokes. He had a way with the hyperbolic comparison, analogies so overblown and hysterical.
***
His career had some up and down, and we had a saying about "The Curse of Clement". Temporary difficulties with graphic designers, editors, legal department and such. But when I think about him now, I feel that there was no curse. He had his difficulties like every one, but he just made it interesting while he was telling the story. In fact, he was a winner. Someone who worked real had and earned what he got. In the end, he got a good career, a good reputation, and he also met Dominique ! How could that be "The Curse of Clement" ??
Except the ending, of course.
I'll miss you Clément.
Friday, January 21, 2011
Black and Blind Dick Chick : page 3 is online.
Here's page 3, inked and colored. I'll let the lettering out at this point. That way, you'll have to guess what's it's all about.
Normand Labelle is the writer and he's hired me to pencil, ink, color his project called Black and Blind Dick Chick. Usually, the way these things are done, a proposal is done to show the eventual publisher what is it all about and what it will look like. But were already past that point: happy with the result, he asked me to finish issue one. So, that mean a full 24 pages !
More pages to show you soon !
Normand Labelle is the writer and he's hired me to pencil, ink, color his project called Black and Blind Dick Chick. Usually, the way these things are done, a proposal is done to show the eventual publisher what is it all about and what it will look like. But were already past that point: happy with the result, he asked me to finish issue one. So, that mean a full 24 pages !
More pages to show you soon !
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Black and Blind Dick Chick : page 2 is online.
Here's page 2 ! A project written by Normand Labelle. Not the most unusual thing i've done, but pretty high in that regard. Of course, some of the comic jams were off-beat, but this is a bit different.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Black and Blind Dick Chick : page 1 is online.
Thursday, January 06, 2011
Don't worry...yet.
I'm presently working on updating the blog design with new functions.
It might look weird for a few days. And some links won't be available...
The usual site is available with this link.
Update:
It's pretty much done now for the design. I'll tweak the links, but that's about it.
It might look weird for a few days. And some links won't be available...
The usual site is available with this link.
Update:
It's pretty much done now for the design. I'll tweak the links, but that's about it.
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Joual Vert !
Ma femme viens de commencer depuis 15 jours a tenir un blog. Ce sont généralement des souvenirs de sa vie, de son enfance, des années du collège ou encore des lubies de sa mère. Je ne suis bien sur pas neutre quand je vous dis qu'elle écrit très bien, mais je serais gêné de le dire si je ne le croyais pas vraiment.
Ça s'appelle Joual Vert, pour souligner le coté parfois enrageant de certains détails de nos vies quotidienne.
Harmelle viens de poster son 4e texte sur son blog. Cette fois-ci a propos des phobies de sa maman Haïtienne.
Ça s'appelle Joual Vert, pour souligner le coté parfois enrageant de certains détails de nos vies quotidienne.
Harmelle viens de poster son 4e texte sur son blog. Cette fois-ci a propos des phobies de sa maman Haïtienne.
Friday, December 24, 2010
Joyeux Noël et Bonne Année 2010, Merry Christmas and Happy New Year !
Et voici la carte que j'ai faite pour mes clients en illustration.
And here's the card I made for my illustration clients.
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
It's Romance, Love and Marriage that keeps the cash register ringing !!

Sal Gentile, Charlton comic editor around 1969 !
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Thursday, December 02, 2010
Interview radio: Au Pays des Bulles

Si vous n'avez pas pu l'écouter, ça reste disponible ici.
Il disent sur le site: "Robert Laplante reçoit Éric Thériault, qui nous explique comment il a réussi à réassembler Frankenstein, et nous parle aussi de ses autres projets."
Tiens, je vous conseille aussi d'aller sur leur site, on retrouve beaucoup d'interview avec plein d'acteurs de la bd québécoise. Une mine de trucs. Des interviews avec Siris, Jimmy Beaulieu, Réal Godbout, Thierry Labrosse, etc...
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Les auteurs de Frankenstein Réassemblé au Salon du Livre de Montréal
Nous serons sur place au kiosque de Rotor et Les 400 coups au Salon Du Livre de Montréal ( Place Bonaventure, 800, rue De La Gauchetière Ouest) et nous vous invitons à venir nous rencontrer !
Horaire de dédicaces:
Gabriel Morrissette
Samedi de 9h à 10h
Richard Gagnon
Mercredi 19h à 20h
Dimanche de 18h à 19h
Michael Arsenault
Mercredi 19h à 20h
Jeudi 20h à 21h
Samedi de 9h à 10h
Dimanche de 18h à 19h
Michel Lacombe
(qui sera sur place aussi en tant que scénariste de l'Académie Des Chasseurs de Prime)
Jeudi 18 novembre : de 19h à 20h
Vendredi 19 novembre : de 20h à 21h
Samedi le 20 novembre : de 10h à 11h
Eric Thériault
Mercredi 19h à 20h
Jeudi 20h à 21h
Dimanche de 18h à 19h
Au plaisir de vous y voir !
***
J'étais aussi à Expozine la fin de semaine dernière. Jack Ruttan nous a fait le plaisir cette année encore d'un petit topo avec sa caméra. On peut trouver tout ça sur son blog, ainsi qu'une belle collection de photos.


Photo par Jack Ruttan.
***
UPDATE:
Une liste complète de tous les auteurs de bd au stand de 400 Coups est ici.
Horaire de dédicaces:
Gabriel Morrissette
Samedi de 9h à 10h
Richard Gagnon
Mercredi 19h à 20h
Dimanche de 18h à 19h
Michael Arsenault
Mercredi 19h à 20h
Jeudi 20h à 21h
Samedi de 9h à 10h
Dimanche de 18h à 19h
Michel Lacombe
(qui sera sur place aussi en tant que scénariste de l'Académie Des Chasseurs de Prime)
Jeudi 18 novembre : de 19h à 20h
Vendredi 19 novembre : de 20h à 21h
Samedi le 20 novembre : de 10h à 11h
Eric Thériault
Mercredi 19h à 20h
Jeudi 20h à 21h
Dimanche de 18h à 19h
Au plaisir de vous y voir !
***
J'étais aussi à Expozine la fin de semaine dernière. Jack Ruttan nous a fait le plaisir cette année encore d'un petit topo avec sa caméra. On peut trouver tout ça sur son blog, ainsi qu'une belle collection de photos.


Photo par Jack Ruttan.
***
UPDATE:
Une liste complète de tous les auteurs de bd au stand de 400 Coups est ici.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Expozine 2010

Les détails:
ExpoZine: Dimanche 14 novembre, 2010, de 12h à 18h, au 5035, rue Saint-Dominique (Église Saint-Enfant Jésus, entre Laurier et Saint-Joseph, près du métro Laurier). Entrée gratuite.
***
I'll be at Expozine again this year but only Sunday. It was tough getting a table. I'll have my new french books (Veena and Frankenstein) as well as the new issue of Comic Jam by Chompers press, What The ##!!.
The details:
ExpoZine: Saturday, November 13 and Sunday, November 14, 2010, from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. at 5035 St-Dominique (Église Saint-Enfant Jésus, Laurier Métro). Free admission.
***
The art is a panel from my new project, written by Normand Labelle.
Friday, October 22, 2010
Date de lancement : Frankenstein Réassemblé, le mercredi 27 octobre 2010
Voila, je vous invite au lancement du nouveau livre, une anthologie de bd, dont j'ai dirigé le parcours et ou j'ai aussi participé par une histoire et la couverture. Quelques détails du communiqué de presse de l'éditeur: ''Et si la créature du Docteur Frankenstein avait survécu à son exil en Arctique ? Et si elle était revenue en Angleterre ? Quels sont les liens qui unissent la créature à Jack l’Éventreur ? La formule mise au point par Frankenstein est-elle vraiment perdue ?
C’est à ces questions et bien d’autres que Denis Rodier (L’Ordre des Dragons, Soleil), Gabriel Morrissette (Égide, Delcourt), Michel Lacombe (Punisher, Marvel Comics), Jean-François Bergeron (St-Germain, Glénat), Éric Thériault (Veena, Les 400 coups), Cédric Perez (The Ape, Akileos), Robert Rivard (Les Pixies, Glénat) et Richard Gagnon (What the f...) tentent de répondre en suivant à la trace la Créature et son inventeur, de 1832 à demain.
À travers un traitement graphique propre à chacune des époques où elles se déroulent, les huit histoires qui composent Frankenstein réassemblé, forment une mosaïque insolite et intrigante, un casse-tête exceptionnel… à l’image de leur sujet.'' (réf. 4oo coups)
Les Éditions 400 coups et la librairie Planète BD ont le plaisir de vous inviter au lancement du nouveau titre de la collection Rotor, Frankenstein réassemblé en présence de quelques uns des auteurs qui ont signé ce collectif, le mercredi 27 octobre dès 17h.
Un vin d'honneur sera servi. Au plaisir de vous y retrouver!
Frankenstein Réassemblé
Mercredi 27 octobre, à partir de 17 h
À la librairie Planète BD
3883 St-Denis
Montréal, QC
H2W 2M4
514-759-9800
info@planetebd.ca
Saturday, October 09, 2010
Montreal Comic Scene, 2010 version

Photograph by: (John Mahoney,The Gazette)
Al Kratina from the Montreal Gazette just wrote a very good article about the Montreal Comic Scene, mostly from the english point of view. A very complete coverge.
I'll buy the Gazette today, but you can read the online version here.
In store, it's the saturday october 9 edition.
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
John Star: page 261 is online.
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Frankenstein Réassemblé maintenant à l'imprimerie.

Pour résumer, FR est une anthologie sur la thématique du monstre, du docteur Frankenstein et de ses liens avec la science moderne, le tout étalé sur plus de 200 ans. Une dizaine d'artistes ont travaillé chacun dans son style et avec ses propres références à créer des histoires sur cette thématique. Quelques paramètres ont été imposées: tout est fait dans son propre style mais en assumant que ça se passe dans le même univers, la même continuité. Donc, pas de contradiction entre les histoires, même si les narrateurs changent. Après avoir reçu les histoires, j'ai travaillé les intercalaires; une série de coupures de journaux, de cartes de bibliothèque, d'extraits de magazines et de nouvelles fantastique qui trouvent de petits éléments et relient le tout pour en faire un ensemble.
Voici la liste des auteurs qui se retrouvent dans la version finale du livre:
Alcante, Djieff, Shane Simmons, Gabriel Morrissette, Michael Arsenault, Denis Rodier, Richard Gagnon, François Caillé, Michel Lacombe, Robert Rivard et moi-même.
Quelques autres nom méritent aussi d'être mentionnés: Stéfanie Morin, coloriste de l'histoire de Michel Lacombe et Carlos Baratto qui a travaillé avec moi à la couverture.
J'ai le goût de mentionner Carlos en particulier parce qu'il a toujours été un artisan de l'ombre et j'aimerais bien qu'il soit plus connu. Carlos a commencé sa carrière très jeune, assistant Hugo Pratt alors qu'ils étaient en Argentine dans les années 1961-62 sur la série Fort Wheeling. Il a continué avec Pratt avant de travailler sur Condorito, le célèbre personnage Chilien. Dans les années 70, Carlos a migré au Québec ou il a travaillé dans le milieu de l'illustration, entre autre pour Perspectives. Il a depuis beaucoup travaillé en animation entre autre sur Les Triplettes de Belleville et d'autres productions de l'ONF. Personnellement, je l'ai rencontré alors que j'étais à Cinar, puis ensuite à Oasis.
D'autre artistes ont aussi participé, à différentes étapes, à des versions antérieures de ce livre qui a beaucoup évolué avec les années et les éditeurs disponibles, mais la direction finale choisie pour le livre nous a demandé, à Michel Viau (directeur de collection à 400 Coups) et moi de faire des choix difficiles. Éventuellement mettre de coté les concepts trop camp ou humoristique.
Dans les noms à retenir et à remercier, nommons Pierre Fournier (Michel Risque, Red Ketchup et grand gourou du meilleur blog sur Frankenstein, Frankensteinia ), Louis Lachance, Marc Jetté, Richard Suicide, André Poliquin (Escadron Delta), Dan Villeneuve, Bonhomme (Charles-Emmanuel Ouellette), Jull, Yanick Champoux et d'autres...
Je vous reviens avec quelques détails de plus bientôt, quand je saurai la date de sortie en magasin et le lancement.
Sunday, September 05, 2010
Montreal Comicon 12 septembre 2010

Je voulais vous inviter à la Montreal Comicon le dimanche prochain, le 12 septembre. J'y serai en séance de dédicace au kiosque des 400 Coups avec mes confrères aussi publiés chez eux. Je pourrai y signer Veena et les Spectre du Temps et montrer des extraits du collectif a sortir le mois prochain Frankenstein Réassemblé dont j'ai dirigé la conception, aussi aux 400 Coups dans la collection Rotor.
L'affiche est de l'ami Stéphane Louis. auteur de Tessa.
Voici l'horaire.
Samedi 11
11h00 Sirkowski (Miss Dynamite)
12h00 Samuel Leblanc (Parfum de lilas)
13h00 Jocelyn Bonnier (L'Ocelot)
14h00 Francis Desharnais (Burquette)
15h00 Sébastien Rivest (Malaise)
16h00 Simon Labelle (Le Suicide de la Déesse)
17h00 Michel Vaillancourt (Lionel et Nooga)
Dimanche 12
11h00 Éric Thériault (Veena et Les Spectre du Temps, Frankenstein Réassemblé )
12h00 Jacques Lamontagne (Les contes d'outre-tombe, Druide)
13h00 Jocelyn Bonnier (L'Ocelot)
14h00 Francis Desharnais (Burquette)
15h00 Daniel Shelton (Ben)
Saturday, July 10, 2010
Bibop et Loula

Un fan art pour l'anniversaire d'Arnaud Hilmarcher. Ce sont les 2 perso de la serie Bibop et Loula qu'il publiait dans Pif Gadget de 2006 à la fin du journal en 2009.
Ici sur sa page de Deviant Art. Visitez, c'est plein de trucs !
J'aime bien le style d'Arnaud, sa patte est unique et il y a un plaisir dans son dessin qui est rare. On peut voir ici le fan art qu'il avait réalisé de Veena l'an dernier.
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