The Museum, in its custom-built home, is imposing, but also
fun, with eccentric angles and shapes, covered with enlarged pen-stroke
graphics, maybe from the backgrounds of some of Hergé’s work, but abstract at
such a large size. The shop is housed in a block that is reminiscent of Tintin
in America: a New York style apartment block, a building within a building.
You take a lift to the top floor, and start a chronological
journey, from Hergé’s birth and first drawings, ending up with his death,
mourned by many fans around the globe. In-between are examples of his output,
including graphic design: posters, advertising and logos. This work, although
looking of its time is of a high quality, and Hergé’s professionalism,
meticulous approach and work ethic can be clearly seen here. At this early
point in his career his drawings were not his ‘serious work’, but, as is often
the case, it was where is heart lay. Hergé’s prodigious talent as a draftsman
was abundantly clear from sketches he did as a young boy: the energy,
observation and wit visible in them was what defined his work. Even when people
more technically proficient than him were assisting him, it was Hergé’s vision
and energy that drove Tintin and all his other projects.
The main-stay of the exhibition are examples of artwork from
the Tintin books, with some from his other series’: Bob and Bobbet and Quicke
and Flupke. There is the finished line artwork from pages of the albums and
book covers, in all its messy glory, with squares of paper pasted in and white
opaque masking out mistakes and redraws. There are also preliminary sketches
showing early versions of various scenes, a page of Tibetan portraits, sketches
of different poses, all testimony to the painstaking work that went into the
stories. There are also some colour proofs of the colour plates, although sadly
no original painted colour artwork, which would have been interesting to see.
My 12 year old daughter enjoyed the Museum very much, saying
she liked it because it was small! Maybe the never-ending size of some of the
large Museums is overwhelming to a child. My own impression was also positive,
especially as an illustrator, to see the original artwork and techniques of
such a master, and understand just what went into his work.
I could not help but compare the difference in approach that
Somerset House took with their Tintin exhibition in 2015. This exhibition, in
reality not much more than a few window and wall vinyls, was playful, engaging,
delightful and immersive, and while the Hergé Foundation see themselves as
repository of Hergé’s memory, another light in which to see his work was
visible at the Somerset House exhibition. Thinking back to my childhood when I
first discovered Tintin, the books immersed me in their world, and I really
felt that I was traveling to the Middle East, to Eastern Europe, Peru, that I
was on a merchant ship in the Red Sea, or a Chateau in rural Belgium. It was
the way the simple window vinyls drew one into Tintin’s world that I loved so
much about that exhibition. The vinyls in the fireplace of Dr Muller emerging, sneezing,
or snowy covered in soot. The windows of Somerset House became windows onto
different scenes in the books: the broken glass of The Calculus Affair, the
stick bouncing off the bars of the castle in King Ottokar’s Scepter or a view
of New York from Tintin in America. There was also an entire wall with the
end-paper graphics from the hard-back books – the wall of portraits, enlarged
to the size of an entire wall, and looking like the wall of a room in a
chateau.
Part of me thinks the Hergé Museum was a lost opportunity to
captivate a new, younger audience. There could have been, for example, a Middle
Eastern souk that you could walk down, with life sized figures of Tintin, in
disguise and Captain Allen, or maybe the Emir on a donkey with the Thomsons in
the background. How about a life-sized rocket that you could walk through, and
see Calculus at the controls, or, even better, sit at the controls yourself. Or
maybe a jungle, with a warm breeze blowing through the palm trees, and swearing
parrots in the branches and the Francis Haddock idol. (This is starting to
sound more like Disneyland than Tintin… maybe it just needs to stay in my
imagination!)
What Hergé achieved with his Tintin books was to transport his readers to a different place: they are a trigger for the imagination, a frame with which to see the world: much more than pen and ink, rather the magic of story-telling, taking a place in a tradition that encompasses both Greek Mythology and the films of Steven Spielberg.
What Hergé achieved with his Tintin books was to transport his readers to a different place: they are a trigger for the imagination, a frame with which to see the world: much more than pen and ink, rather the magic of story-telling, taking a place in a tradition that encompasses both Greek Mythology and the films of Steven Spielberg.
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