“The color of things” by Swiss Martin Panchaud, dedicated to Angoulême

The color of things by Swiss Martin Panchaud dedicated to

Angoulême, in the south-west of France, hosts the international comic strip festival as every year. The awards ceremony for the best albums of this fiftieth edition was held on Saturday evening. And this year again, the jury gave pride of place to more confidential, even radical works.

with our special correspondent in Angoulême, Sophie Torlotin

The Angoulême festival has chosen the avant-garde for its fiftieth edition. The Fauve d’or for best album goes to a quasi-experimental graphic novel: The color of things.

A first attempt and a masterstroke for the 41-year-old Swiss designer, Martin Panchaud. His story, in the style of a police investigation, shows how a 16-year-old teenager sets up a scam to recover money from a horse bet. The novelty lies in the graphic treatment: each character is represented, seen from very high, by a circle of color.

How do you tell a story with as little information as possible? Very quickly, I had a character in the shape of a circle that I made speak, that I captioned, that I made dialogue with others… I saw that it worked! I designed it so that when you start reading, you learn the system pretty quickly. It takes three-four, five pages maximum and we forget the system, we imagine the bodies, the faces… »

The rest of the prize list crowns small publishing houses, or even mangas… Three Japanese cartoonists, who came to Angoulême for dedicated exhibitions, receive a Fauve. Including the young star of Japanese comics, Hajime Isayama, 36, author of the worldwide hit series The attack of the Titanswho leaves with a special Fauve of the 50th edition.

Palmares

Grand Prize of the City of Angoulême for the French Riad Sattouf, author in particular of The Arab of the future

Fauve d’or best album for The color of things by the Swiss Martin Panchaud, the story of an overly loved, unloved teenager

Fauve special 50th edition to Japanese mangaka Hajime Isayama

Fauves of honor to Japanese mangakas Ryoichi Ikegami and Junji Ito

Fauve Special Jury Prize at animator by the French Anouk Ricard

Fauve from the series for Blood relationship by Japanese mangaka Shuzo Oshimi

Fauve revelation for A tree frog in autumn by Swedish Linnea Sterte

Fauve heritage at stone flowers by Japanese mangaka Hisashi Sakaguchi

Fawn from the alternative comics for Forn de Calç (Spain)

Fauve of the France Televisions public at Naphthalene from Argentina Sole Otero

Fauve of high school students Khat, diary of a refugee by Spaniard Ximo Abadia

Fawn youth for The Long March of the Turkeys of the Swiss Léonie Bischoff and the American Kathleen Karr

The prize for artistic courage to the Russian Victoria Lomasko

On the sidelines of the festival, the festival off also distinguishes a foreign author with the Prize for artistic courage. This year, it is the Russian designer in exile Victoria Lomasko who is highlighted. This 44-year-old comic book author is known for her critical vision of society and power in Russia and other former Soviet republics, exposed in reports published by several foreign media.

Short haircut, frank and direct gaze, Victoria Lomasko looks like a fighter. With pencils as his only weapon, the 44-year-old artist denounces the transformation of his country, Russia, into an implacable dictatorship.

She made the decision to leave in March 2022, days after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. ” I was not preparing specifically to emigrate, but I spent the last two years in Russia because of the Covid because I could no longer leave the country. I was very isolated, without the possibility of being published. When the war started, my decision was quite quick, and I left in ten days. “.

This left-wing feminist activist, follower of drawn reportage, took refuge in Europe, like, she says, the majority of Russian artists. ” There are arrests every day in Russia, searches often accompanied by human rights violations, rapes, beatings, and we are witnessing the destruction of the archives of certain artists. »

Based in Germany, Victoria Lomasko intends to continue to denounce the abuses of Vladimir Putin’s regime. His new work, The Last Soviet Artistwill appear in a few weeks in France.

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