Tintin and Alph-Art

Left unfinished when he died in 1983, Hergé's last episode, Tintin and Alph-Art (published in 1986), was to describe the occult world of sects. It was also going to send Tintin wandering into a milieu that Hergé loved, that is the world of modern art and avant-garde. Although the posthumous album is only presenting the scenario and sketches of an interrupted tale, it is however the testimony of the extraordinary narrative and graphic talent of Tintin's father. Just like Tintin, just like the story, we, the readers, will remain magically suspended to Hergé's quill.
Tintin and Alph-Art cover
Tintin and Alph-Art
Tintin and Alph-Art
Tintin and Alph-Art
Tintin and Alph-Art
Tintin and Alph-Art
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Tintin’s last adventure...

The twenty-fourth and final title in the Tintin series is an unfinished symphony. Three pencilled page, forty-two further pages roughly sketched, a few pages of storyline, and other scribbles and notes, make up Hergé’s ultimate story. There is clearly enough material for a very promising adventure, although the work is somewhat fragmented.
Tintin and Alph-Art covers
© Hergé / Tintinimaginatio - 2024

Art or not art: that is the question

Hergé chose the contemporary phenomenon of religious sects, with their gurus and disciples, as an element to weave into his storyline. The plot unfolds against the backdrop of the modern art world, which Hergé knew well.
Tintin and Alph-Art
© Hergé / Tintinimaginatio - 2024
The creator of Tintin was extremely interested in modern art, and spent a lot of his spare time visiting galleries and exhibitions. Hergé even tried his hand at creating his own modern art, although he thought that the results were not very promising. He decided not to take his hobby further and instead consecrated his spare time to his passion for collecting.

The adventure begins

Captain Haddock, following the advice of Bianca Castafiore, buys a work of art – a Perspex H – by Ramo Nash, the creator of Alph-Art. A short while afterwards the owner of an art gallery, Mr Fourcart, is assassinated. Tintin sets out to solve the case.
Tintin and Alph-Art - tintin, Haddock
© Hergé / Tintinimaginatio - 2024

“Truth and lies”

It is very likely that Hergé saw the Orson Welles film F for Fake, which hit the big screen in 1974. The film – created in mock-documentary style – portrays the life and work of the notorious Hungarian forger Elmyr de Hory. Orson Welles spun an intricate web of truth and deception to create a movie that has since been hailed for its visionary editing techniques.

Alph-Art: H for Hergé...

Alph-Art is an imaginary artistic movement founded by forger Ramo Nash, who paints and sculpts the letters of the alphabet. The high priest of Alph-Art shows off a capital A and a capital Z, which stand for, in Bianca Castafiore’s words, ‘a microcosm of the whole universe’.
Tintin and Alph-Art H
© Hergé / Tintinimaginatio - 2024
Tintin and Alph-Art Castafiore
© Hergé / Tintinimaginatio - 2024

Endaddine Akass

Bianca Castafiore succumbs to the charm and charisma of this undesirable character. She gushes, ‘He is a fascinating man, darling, absolutely fascinating. You simply must meet him. He's the most m-a-a-rvellous mystic... He lays his hands on your head and you're magnetised for a year.’ It is worth noting that in his choice of name, Hergé was up to his old tricks: “En dat in â kass” in Brussels dialect could roughly be translated as “take that in the face”!
Tintin and Alph-Art - Endaddine Akass is Fernand Legros
Fernand Legros inspired Hergé to create the character Endaddine Akass.
Endaddine Akass runs a network of forgers; he is also a guru and the host of the Health and Magnetism spiritual teachings. Physically he resembles Fernand Legros, a forger who was active at the time the story was written.

The Fourcart Gallery

One of Hergé’s friends, Marcel Stal, was the director of the Carrefour Gallery in Brussel. Stal provided some of the inspiration for the character of Henri FOURCART, director of the gallery named after him.
Tintin and Alph-Art - Marcel STAL
Marcel STAL

The Pompidou refinery

In a television interview, Emir Ben Kalish Ezab amusingly and unwittingly expresses the feelings of many French people and visitors to France, when he speaks about the Beaubourg Centre: ‘a refinery turned into a museum’!
Tintin and Alph-Art
© Hergé / Tintinimaginatio - 2024
The official name of the building is the “Centre National d’Art et de Culture Georges Pompidou”, and it was created between 1971 and 1976 by Italian architect Renzo Piano and Englishman Richard Rogers.

A César sculpture

Endaddine Akass has a particularly nasty end planned for Tintin: to get rid of him by turning him into a fake work by sculptor César.
Tintin - The Adventures of Tintin - Tintin and Alph-Art
© Hergé / Tintinimaginatio - 2024 - All rights reserved
Tintin - The Adventures of Tintin - Tintin and Alph-Art - César Baldaccini
César Baldaccini
César Baldaccini, a French artist whose ‘Compressions’ of cars (1960) and ‘Expansions’ of plastics (1967) earned him fame and fortune. Smaller works by César have been awarded to outstanding achievers in the French film industry since 1975.

The death of a hero

Is Tintin fated to share the outcome of famous British amateur detective Sherlock Holmes, whose creator Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930) ended Holmes’ career in 1927?
Tintin - The Adventures of Tintin - Tintin and Alph-Art
© Hergé / Tintinimaginatio - 2024 - All rights reserved
21 reviews
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sukhdip1
28/12/2023 16:21 PM
This looks so cool!
tintin7snowy
27/09/2023 18:36 PM
I rlly liked the plot of this story. I only wished Herge finished the book....
R.I.P
HERGE
typhoon5
09/09/2023 20:14 PM
Weird!
fakenoodles
30/08/2023 11:11 AM
Tintin & Alph-Art is just kind of creepy.
jacowals
30/06/2023 07:53 AM
RIP
bowtieman
25/06/2023 18:39 PM
Rest in peace..... The Adventures of Tintin.
miloutinin
24/05/2023 09:23 AM
the last page is quite scary in my eyes just tintin about to die and nothingness
jacowals
07/05/2023 08:14 AM
Yes redraw it
miloutinin
10/04/2023 19:07 PM
reaally cool story idea maybe in the future we redraw it?
zhantintin
14/12/2022 09:15 AM
遗憾的是,我没能去到去年八月份在上海举办的丁丁与埃尔热展览
oakholdc
27/11/2022 14:15 PM
As an ever-growing artist myself, Tintin and Alph-Art has been one of the few catalysts for my recent passion of embracing the roughness, the chaos, and the imperfections of creating a drawing.

Tintin and Alph-Art had Herge's rough ideas that were once lingering in his mind for a while, later released onto paper through the use of pencils and pens. These sketches had some form of... formation. They're the skeletal structure of the comic's story that would've been, could've been, might've been,… voir la suite
tintinsboy
13/10/2022 21:01 PM
I'd hate to read of Tintin's death. But still, after I read the unfinished original by Herge, I read a guessed continuation by Yves Rodier, where his last adventure ends with a happily ever after.
ridwan1997
10/07/2022 12:10 PM
So sad that Hergé passed away before continuing "Alph-Art" story...
12345tcdsv
19/01/2022 15:27 PM
!!''קטלנצי''
18/01/2022 22:40 PM
This was so interesting to read, and such a good story! Terribly sad Hergé died before he could complete it, R.I.P..
vahidesmi
29/09/2021 20:48 PM
in Persian:
تن‌تن و هنر الف‌با
kalpan
29/07/2021 06:28 AM
I never read Jordan book before
doctor14
15/07/2021 09:53 AM
Never read this book, but there had got to be credit for Hergé here! Writing these whilst he was suffering from illness, just what an absolutely talented human being he is! The dedication that Hergé must’ve had to want to be able to continue warming the hearts of readers is unreal! What an inspiring personality he is to fans of Tintin or not. He should be acknowledged more for his works, and how it played a vital part in shaping history and society.
mspennylane
14/06/2021 17:07 PM
Tintin <3
t0315523j
13/06/2021 15:12 PM
Tintin And Alph-Art
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