Cartoon Crazy
Comics are seen as 'the ninth art' in France. Kirsty Lang and Lucy Ash ask why the French were the first to elevate comics to an art form rather than a geeky pastime.
Comics or Bandes Dessines are seen as "the ninth art" in France. Graphic novels are not just entertainment - they deal with serious topics from biography and philosophy to chronicling events like the Iranian Revolution and the Rwandan genocide. So why were the French the first to elevate comics to an art form rather than a geeky pastime?
Kirsty and Lucy talk to Jose Luis Bocquet about his vivid chronicle of the rollercoaster life of Kiki de Montparnasse -the famous beauty, artists' model and painter in her own right. In Paris, magazine editor Patrick de St Exupery explains why he commissions cartoonists to bring current affairs stories to a new audience. He says that the cartoons in XXI, which he set up as a French equivalent to the New Yorker, help to sell this glossy and expensive monthly magazine at a time when his competitors are closing down. And Lucy and Kirsty discover that Paris has several bookshops entirely devoted to selling graphic novels and cartoon books.
Last on
More episodes
Street Theatre and a Giant Elephant
Kirsty Lang and Lucy Ash meet the world's most celebrated street theatre company.
Underground Art - Literally
Kirsty and Lucy investigate an arts collective operating in tunnels beneath Paris.
False Beards and Feminists
Lucy and Kirsty find out how feminism in France is still very much a fringe affair.
That Film Festival Fixation
Kirsty Lang and Lucy Ash explore the French obsession with film festivals.
Broadcast
- Tue 20 Nov 2012 13:45大象传媒 Radio 4