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Forty micronations, created by as many illustrators, will parade through the streets of Strasbourg at the opening of this 16th edition of the Festival.
Alongside them is a new kakemono created by children from the Foyer Charles Frey in Strasbourg with illustrator Alice Jouan and the help of the Tôt ou t’art association. The parade passes through various exhibitions at the Festival, ending at the Port du Rhin for the opening of the Dialogue de dessins exhibition and the inauguration of the Rencontres de l’illustration.
The artists engage in a playful and highly conceptual experiment. The key character: the dog.
The first element of the exchange is a grid proposed by one person to another, on which to embroider localised indications, here a ‘dog’, there a “spy”, from this place to that one a ‘catastrophe’. An exploration of the very principle of illustration in a structuralist game with a very carnal result.
Born in Paris in 1999, she lives and works in Strasbourg. After attending the Renoir School, she went on to study visual education at HEAR. In 2023, she founded the La Fourrière workshop with fellow illustrators and tattoo artists. In 2023, she founded the La Fourrière studio with her illustrator and tattoo artist friends. She targets a young audience, notably with L’Homme de fer, based on a text by Thibault Bérard published by Albin Michel Jeunesse. Her first comic book will be released there in 2026, while L’École des loisirs will publish two more of her books.
Born in 1985 in Lyon, he lives and works in Quimperlé. While studying at Émile Cohl in Lyon, he co-founded the Arbitraire collective in 2005. He gained experience by publishing several small books and magazines, and began to be published externally. Today he works on various comic strips and children’s books, draws for the press, and creates animated clips, posters and window displays. He eats everything except Brussels sprouts.
This exhibition adapts Laura Simonati’s illustrated book The dog party, published by Versant Sud Jeunesse, into poster format.
On the eve of the 38th World Dog Show, the most beautiful dogs in the world are gathered together: groomed, perfumed, carefully prepared, they wait patiently in their cages. When evening comes, their owners leave, leaving Piumino, a small dog without a pedigree, who has been excluded from the competition for this reason, to watch over them. Soon, the dogs ask him to let them out to stretch their legs… and a joyful clandestine party begins. The whole story is told through a play on colour, points of view and naive forms of expression. Posters printed with the support of Lézard Graphique.
Italian illustrator born near Verona. After graduating from the Faculty of Design and Arts at the Libera Università di Bolzano in 2017, she moved to Brussels, where she pursued a master’s degree in visual communication at ENSAV La Cambre. She now lives in Brussels and works on a wide range of illustration projects: children’s books, editorial illustration, cultural events and visual identity. Her illustrated book Mariedl. Une histoire gigantesque, published by Versant Sud, won the Bologna Ragazzi Award – Opera Prima 2023 at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair. Her practice is largely inspired by vernacular and popular art, which continuously feeds her visual language.
Every month, Épique Époque brings together scientists from various disciplines at the Jardin des Sciences Planetarium to discuss a social issue.
Hélène Bléhaut illustrated these exchanges during the 2024–2025 academic year. This exhibition looks back on seven editions through a technique known as graphic facilitation. Its aim is to summarise the scientists’ words through illustration: declining birth rates, inclusive language, cognitive biases, the mechanisms of cancer, and more.
A Strasbourg-based illustrator and graduate of HEAR, a long-time collaborator with Central Vapeur, Collier d’Or and now Papier Gâchette, we were eager to invite Maël Escot to exhibit his work.
This is done with two posters screen-printed by Lézard Graphique featuring two dog films from the Star and Cosmos programmes, displayed on the front of the cinemas. The first ‘Doggo friendly’ screening open to dogs in Strasbourg will take place on 21 March at 11am at the Star cinema and will feature Brian Levant’s Beethoven, an Ivan Reitman production from 1992. At the Cosmos, there will be a focus on dogs in the Animalité cycle until 31 March with the films: Wendy and Lucy, White God, White Dog, Baxter, Marona’s Fantastic Journey and a programme of short films including Alice Guy’s unforgettable Course à la saucisse (1907). On 7 March at 8.30 p.m., there will be a special evening screening of Raja Gosnell’s Scooby-Doo (2002) with a surprise animation by Les Mystérieuses·x associées. Come in costume!
A cathartic and immersive exhibition on the theme of doggo melancholy. We all know the blues of the iench… So let’s get ready to exorcise the demons of this dog’s life in a wow and woof exhibition!
Discover works at dog height, in black and white for the eyes of our canine best friends, but also a kennel for humans! The workshop is composed of illustrators Félix Auvard, Sara Dantas-Lima, Chloé FR, Julia Fréchette, Corentin Garrido, Clara Hervé, Lucille Meister, Béatrice Revel and Coline Weinz.
Temporary installation in the bookshop window to mark this meeting with the author of one of the most talked-about comic books of 2025.
In Rouge Signal, published by Éditions 2042, Laurie Agusti draws parallels between the lives of women working in a nail salon and that of a man undergoing radical masculinist radicalisation. At the point of convergence/no return, colours and shades that are also those of the book.
A comprehensive retrospective of Blutch’s disciple and master of the new western. A key figure in the revival of adventure comics in France (Isaac le Pirate, Gus), Blain also excels at depicting reality with the comical diplomatic memoirs of Quai d’Orsay, or the ecological discourse of J.-P. Jancovici in Un monde sans fin (An Endless World), including his pro-nuclear ravings.
Admission fee > CHF 12 / CHF 7 (reduced)
Reduced rate upon presentation of your Central Vapeur membership card!
A comprehensive retrospective of one of the last giants of international comic books, Argentine José Muñoz, who left a profound mark on the history of black and white illustration. Together with Marco Sampayo, he is the author of Alack Sinner and Joe’s Bar, dark series with a gloomy atmosphere, but he has also explored the world of jazz and tango and illustrated Albert Camus.
Admission fee > CHF 12 / CHF 7 (reduced)
Reduced rate upon presentation of your Central Vapeur membership card!