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Hergé and Museum
The long-awaited Hergé Museum was opened in Louvain-La-Neuve on 2 June 2009.
The Hergé Museum is located in the centre of Louvain-la-Neuve, on the edge of a green park, Le Parc de la Source.
On 22 May 2007 ( the centenary of the birthday of Hergé, the creator of Tintin ) the first stone was laid for the Hergé Museum.
The Museum houses a temporary exhibition gallery, which is updated every few months to host new exhibitions ( with diverse titles such as Tintin, Hergé and Trains and Into Tibet with Tintin ).

Hergé and contains
As well as the series, this category contains Tintin and the Lake of Sharks, a comic not written by Hergé based on the film Tintin et le lac aux requins ; and Le Thermozéro, a comic Hergé attempted and then abandoned.

Hergé and original
On 30 May 2010, a life-sized bronze statue of Tintin and Snowy, and more than 200 other Tintin items, including many original panels by Hergé, sold for 1. 08 million euros ($ 1. 3 million USD ) at a Paris auction.
According to Hergé, both the original and the later name were honest mistakes: he thought Blumenstein was a common American name, and chose Bohlwinkel because it sounded like " bollewinkel ", a candy store.
Controversially, in his original version, Hergé gave the man a Jewish-sounding name and had him based in New York.
As a token of appreciation, Hergé added the character " Chang Chong-Chen " ( Tchang in original French-language version ) to The Blue Lotus, a young Chinese orphan boy who meets and befriends Tintin.
Tintin in America ( in the original French, Tintin en Amérique ) is the third title in the comic book series The Adventures of Tintin, written and drawn by Belgian cartoonist Hergé.
Tintin in the Land of the Soviets ( in the original French, Les Aventures de Tintin, reporter du " Petit Vingtième ", au pays des Soviets ) is the first title in the comic book series The Adventures of Tintin, written and drawn by Belgian cartoonist Hergé ( 1907 – 1983 ).
In the original French edition, Hergé made up an artificial language for the Arumbaya tribe and their sworn enemies, the Rumbabas, based on Marols or Marollien, a Flemish dialect spoken in the city of Brussels.
The Secret of the Unicorn ( in the original French, Le Secret de la Licorne ) is the eleventh title in the comic book series The Adventures of Tintin, written and illustrated by Belgian cartoonist Hergé.
Featuring characters from the The Adventures of Tintin comic book series written and drawn by the Belgian writer-artist Hergé, it was a live-action film with actors made-up to look like the characters and featured an original storyline not based on any of the books.
Jolyon Wagg ( in the original French version: Séraphin Lampion ) is a fictional character in The Adventures of Tintin, the series of classic Belgian comic books written and illustrated by Hergé.
The nightmare of a South American native stalking a Westerner in his bedroom had been used before by Hergé in the original black-and-white publication of The Broken Ear ( though it is not included in the present edition most commonly available today ).
It was the second live-action movie, with an original story based on characters from the comic book series The Adventures of Tintin, written and drawn by the Belgian artist Hergé.
Thomson and Thompson ( original French: Dupont et Dupond ) are fictional characters in The Adventures of Tintin, the series of classic Belgian comic books written and illustrated by Hergé.
Ackté is most likely the original model for the opera diva character Bianca Castafiore in comics books of " Adventures of Tintin " by Belgian Hergé.

Hergé and artwork
During later years Hergé had grown more and more interested in modern art, even attempting it a few times himself as a hobby ; so he chose to incorporate his love of avant-garde artwork into the new story.
For a counterculture production, the standard of artwork is exceptionally high ; Shelton's striving for accuracy and attention to detail have earned him comparisons with Hergé.
After his death in 1983, Hergé's widow, Fanny, led the efforts, undertaken at first by the Hergé Foundation and then by the new Studios Hergé, to catalogue and choose the artwork and elements that would eventually become part of the Museum's exhibitions.

Hergé and by
Georges Prosper Remi ( 22 May 1907 – 3 March 1983 ), known by the pen name Hergé, was a Belgian comics writer and artist.
In 2007, an old " strip " by Hergé was found on a wall of the school.
Tintin in the Land of the Soviets, by " Hergé ", appeared in the pages of Le Petit Vingtième on 10 January 1929, and ran until 8 May 1930.
At the end of his studies in Brussels, Chang returned home to China, and Hergé lost contact with him during the invasion of China by Japan and the subsequent civil war.
Prior to the invasion of neutral Belgium by German forces, Hergé published humoristic drawings in L ' Ouest, a paper run by future collaborator Raymond de Becker and which strongly advocated that Belgium not join the war alongside its World War One allies France and Britain.
During the chaotic post-occupation period, Hergé was arrested four times by different groups.
Tintin had always been credited as simply " by Hergé ", without mention of Edgar Pierre Jacobs and Hergé's other assistants.
Hergé, disillusioned by his treatment and that of many of his colleagues and friends after the war, planned to migrate with his wife Germaine to Argentina, but later abandoned the plan when he began a love affair.
In 1949, while working on the new version of Land of Black Gold ( the first version had been left unfinished by the outbreak of World War II ), Hergé suffered a nervous breakdown and was forced to take an abrupt four month-long break.
With the aid of the studio, Hergé managed to produce The Calculus Affair from 1954 until 1956, followed by The Red Sea Sharks in 1956 to 1957.
The adventure allowed Hergé to confront his nightmares by filling the book with austere alpine landscapes, giving the adventure a powerfully spacious setting.
Hergé began to acquire artworks in the fifties, mainly paintings by Flemish expressionists.
For a year, Hergé learned under Van Lint's guidance, and 37 paintings emerged, influenced by Van Lint, Miro, Poliakoff, Devan or Klee.
His paintings from this period are nonetheless valued by collectors not only because they are by Hergé but also for their intrinsic qualities.
* The Blue Lotus, a Tintin book by Hergé
The edited albums later had their blanked blocks redrawn by Hergé to be more acceptable, and they currently appear this way in published editions around the world.
In lighter media, a few stars of the comic industry made their debut, including Tintin, a comic book character created by Hergé, who would appear in over 200 million comic books in 60 languages.
; The Franco-Belgian comics: The Comic strip The Adventures of Tintin, one of the most popular 20th century European comics, was created in 1929 by Hergé.
* Quick & Flupke, a comic book series by Hergé
Syldavia ( Cyrillic: Зилдaвиa ) is a fictional Balkan kingdom featured in The Adventures of Tintin by Hergé.
The Red Sea Sharks is the nineteenth of The Adventures of Tintin, a series of classic comic-strip albums written and illustrated by Hergé, featuring young reporter Tintin as a hero.
Hergé obviously had a strong contempt for slavery, as evidenced by strongly negative emphasis placed on the villainy of slave traders ( supplemented by the scene in which Captain Haddock hurls his peculiar brand of expletives at a slaver leaving their ship ).

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