Tintin comics’ 1932 cover fetches record 1.3 million euros at auction

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

It shows the young adventurer Tintin, dressed as a cowboy and sitting with his dog, Snowy, as axe-wielding American Indians creep up on them

A rare 1932 cover drawing of a Tintin comic book has been sold for a record 1.3 million euros at an auction in Paris

The ‘Tintin in America’ cover, hand-drawn by Belgian writer and illustrator Herge, broke the record - set by the same item in 2008, when it sold for 764,000 euros, the BBC reported

It shows the young adventurer Tintin, dressed as a cowboy and sitting with his dog, Snowy, as axe-wielding American Indians creep up on them

The Indian ink and gouache drawing work, which was bought by a private collector, is one of only five remaining such works by Herge - real name Georges Remi - who died in 1983. Only two of those are in private hands

The buyer is anonymous but he was represented at the auction by a friend identified only as Didier.

“If he’d have been able to get it for less I think he would have been happy,” Didier said after the sale.

“The aim was not to beat a record; the aim was to obtain the work, before anything else... You don’t come here to beat the world record, to spend money, that doesn’t make any sense,” he said.

Saturday’s sale was part of a rare larger sale of Tintin memorabilia, including draft sketches of Tintin and a copy of ‘Explorers on the Moon’, signed by the first men to walk on the Moon, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, and fellow astronaut Michael Collins.