Cover art for a special edition of Tintin in America sold for a price of 1.3 million Euros (£1m; $1.6m) to an anonymous bidder at an auction event held by the Paris-based auction house Artcurial in June 2012. The art, made in 1932 by Tintin creator Hergé (the pen name for the Belgian Georges Remi), depicts the young journalist Tintin in cowboy attire eating with his dog Snowy as some Native Americans creeps up behind him. The same piece of artwork, which was created in Indian ink and gouache, sold for just 764,000 euros when it last came up for sale in 2008. A spokesman for the successful bidder said at the time “If he’d have been able to get it for less I think he (the bidder) would have been happy. 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.”

According to press reports the cover is one of only five remaining ink and gouache originals by Herge. Only two of which are in private hands.

Tintin in America has featured a number of covers over the years.

Tintin made his debut in Le Petit Vingtième, the children’s supplement of the Belgian Newspaper Le Vingtième Siecle, in 1929 with the first episode of Tintin in the land of the Soviets.

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History of Auctioneering

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