Tintin in America original drawing by Hergé sells at auction for €2.1m

Black and white drawing from the 1942 book fetches record price

Tintin in America drawing on display. Photograph: Chesnot/Getty Images
Tintin in America drawing on display. Photograph: Chesnot/Getty Images

A piece of artwork by Tintin creator Hergé has set the world record for the most valuable original black and white drawing by the artist – after selling at auction for more than two million euros.

The drawing Tintin in America – created in 1942 – was used for the colour edition of the Belgian cartoonist’s 1946 book of the same name.

The book is the third instalment in Hergé’s The Adventures Of Tintin series about the young Belgian reporter and his dog Snowy.

It sees the pair travel to the United States, where Tintin reports on organised crime in Chicago.

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At the sale on Friday, organised by French auction house Artcurial, the black and white drawing sold for a total of €2.158 million euros.

It was drawn using Indian ink, graphite, blue pencil and corrective gouache – and was accompanied by its official certificate from the Hergé Committee.

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“General de Gaulle once declared ‘my only international rival is Tintin’. This sale in the world of Herge, with this new record for an original drawing in black and white, confirms it,” said Eric Leroy, cartoon expert at Artcurial.

Hergé stands in front of a Tintin statue in Brussels in 1982. Photograph: Bernard Charlon/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
Hergé stands in front of a Tintin statue in Brussels in 1982. Photograph: Bernard Charlon/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

Hergé’s Tintin comics are considered to be among the most popular of the 20th century.

The cartoonist, real name Georges Prosper Remi, was also known for the series Quick & Flupke and The Adventures Of Jo, Zette And Jocko.

Hergé died in 1983 at the age of 75.