The BNF and the gallery Auguste Rondel celebrate the acquisition of the original drawings of “La bête est morte” by „Calvo“ at the fabulous Richelieu site. The appearance of the story and cartoon in 1945 was a landmark in artistic achievements for several reasons. (1) Calvo made it possible for whole families to talk about the horrors of war and the Shoa by use of text and images in an form of an animals’ world, well known in France. (2) Because all generations are familiar with the fables written by Jean de la Fontaine, the story set in the world of animals is both appealing and yet a bit more distant than drawing human faces on this traumatizing reality. (3) The cartoons managed to overcome the barriers to understand the beginning and ending of World War II and the geographical spread.
Uderzo, the well known cartoonist of “Asterix” did small services for Calvo when he was still an adolescent in 1945. Learning from the best of a field can give you a head start later on. (Extract of Image by Calvo 1945).