Bob de Moor

Bob de Moor is the pen name of Robert Frans Marie De Moor (20 December 1925 – 26 August 1992), a Belgian comics creator. Chiefly noted as an artist, he is considered an early master of the Ligne claire style.[1] He wrote and drew several comics series on his own, but also collaborated with Hergé on several volumes of The Adventures of Tintin. He completed the unfinished story Professor Sató's Three Formulae, Volume 2: Mortimer vs. Mortimer of the Blake and Mortimer series, after the death of the author Edgar P. Jacobs.

Bob de Moor
BornRobert Frans Marie De Moor
(1925-12-20)20 December 1925
Antwerp, Belgium
Died26 August 1992(1992-08-26) (aged 66)
Brussels, Belgium
NationalityBelgian
Area(s)artist, writer
Notable works
Cori, de Scheepsjongen, The Adventures of Tintin
Barelli
Johan et Stephan
Awardsfull list

Biography

Bob de Moor started drawing with pencil at three or four. Living in a port town, he developed a strong interest for drawing sailing ships which carried into his professional career with his Cori, de Scheepsjongen series and other work.[2] Following studies at the Antwerp Academy of Fine Arts, De Moor started his career at the Afim animations studios.[1] His first album was written in 1944 for "De Kleine Zondagsvriend".[3]

Beginning in March 1951, starting with Destination Moon, he began a collaboration with Hergé on Tintin albums and Tintin-related material which included extensive work on sketch studies, backgrounds, layout, and ultimately animated films.

His co-worker Jacques Martin is quoted as saying that de Moor had an extraordinary facility to adapt himself to the style of others.[4] This manifested in a seamless integration with Hergé's style, as well as in him being asked on occasion to complete the work of other artists.

De Moor illustrated the album cover of "A World of Machines" (1982) by the Belgian band The Machines.[5]

His son Johan de Moor is also a cartoonist, and completed his father's last album, the fifth in the Cori le Moussaillon series after his father's demise.

Bob de Moor and Tintin

Bob de Moor worked at Studio Hergé from April 1951 to the end of 1986. For Hergé, he was the perfect assistant because he was one of the few who could draw his figures just as or even better than himself. Among the most important works of de Moor on Tintin and Milou are:

·The complete redrawing and revision of the 6th Tintin-Adventure "The Black Island" (1965), for which de Moor was sent by Hergé to England and Scotland in 1962 to find or search for original locations. The cover is also drawn by Bob de Moor.

· While Hergé was on a trip in the summer of 1965, a reporter for the Swiss magazine L’illustré asked De Moor and Jacques Martin if any progress had been made on a new Tintin adventure. Without Hergé's knowledge, the pair created a fake page that they managed to pass off as a genuine extract from an unfinished Tintin book. The page was printed in the magazine, and Hergé - while initially upset - later relented and purchased the work.[6][7]

·Tintin and the Lake of Sharks (1973). Bob de Moor drew and colorized the 47-page film album based on a scenario by Michel Greg.

· One of de Moor's most important works was the drawings for the 1977 album "Tintin and the Picaros". Although Hergé denied that the complete album was drawn at the drawing table by Bob de Moor, most of the drawings probably came from de Moor's hand.

Bibliography

Cover of L'enigmatique monsieur Barelli (1956) one of de Moor's most notable solo projects
Series Remarks
Johan en Stefan / Johan et Stephan 9 volumes0
De raadselachtige meneer Barelli / L'énigmatique monsieur Barelli 8 volumes
Cori, de Scheepsjongen / Cori le Moussaillon 6 volumes
Professeur Troc / Monsieur Tric 3 volumes
De avonturen van Nonkel Zigomar / Les aventures d'Oncle Zigomar0 6 volumes
  • 1949 Le Vaisseau Miracle
  • 1949 Guerre dans le Cosmos, Ed. Coune
  • 1950 Le Lion de Flandre, Ed. Deligne
  • 1950 L'Enigmatic Monsieur Barelli, Ed. du Lombard
  • 1950 Monsieur Tric, Ed. Bédéscope
  • 1951 Les Gars des Flandres, Ed. Bédéscope
  • 1951 Conrad le Hardi, Ed. Bédéscope
  • 1952 Barelli à Nusa-Penida
  • 1959 Les Pirates d'eau douce
  • 1964 Balthazar
  • 1966 Barelli et les agents secrets, Ed. du Lombard
  • 1971 Le Repaire du loup, Ed. Casterman
  • 1972 Barelli et le Bouddha boudant, Ed. du Lombard
  • 1973 Bonne Mine à la mer (Barelli), Ed. du Lombard
  • 1974 Barelli et le seigneur de Gonobutz
  • 1978 Cori le Moussaillon: Les Espions de la Reine, Ed. Casterman[8]

Sources

Footnotes
  1. Lambiek Comiclopedia. "Bob de Moor".
  2. Bourdil, Pierre-Yves and Tordeur, Bernard: "Bob de Moor. 40 ans de bande dessineée, 35 ans au côtés d'Hergé", pp. 14–5, Editions du Lombard, 1986
  3. Coup de chapeau a Bob de Moor, Tintin magazine, 1978
  4. Bourdil, Pierre-Yves and Tordeur, Bernard: "Bob de Moor. 40 ans de bande dessineée, 35 ans au côtés d'Hergé", pp. 91, Editions du Lombard, 1986
  5. http://www.bobdemoor.info/2014/04/23/when-bob-de-moor-and-the-machines-met/
  6. bernard. "The April Fools' joke by Jacques Martin and Bob de Moor in 1965 | Bob De Moor". Retrieved 23 December 2020.
  7. "LA FAUSSE PLANCHE DE TINTIN : L'HISTOIRE D'UNE MAUVAISE BLAGUE". TINTINOMANIA (in French). 18 January 2018. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
  8. Titles cited in Bob de Moor biography in "Coup de chapeau a Bob de Moor", Tintin magazine, supplement to Issue 171, 1979.
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