Tag Archives: Tintin auction

Tintin Auction Announced

This was in my inbox last night and thought I would share…

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2011 – TINTIN YEAR: Rops Auctioneers to host the latest Hergé sale!

Dear Sir/Madam,

Rops Auction House (Namur, Belgium) is set to host the latest sale dedicated to the work of Hergé. The sale will take place in Rops’ auction rooms – 320 Chaussée de Waterloo, 5002 Saint-Servais, Belgium – at 1pm on Sunday 22 May. The Hergé sale is organised with the support of experts from Studios Hergé and in agreement with Moulinsart S.A. Rops is happy to provide free evaluations of objects from, connected or derived from the work of the creator of Tintin.

For more information, download the press kit.

Yours sincerely,

Jean-Pol Clément
Salle de Ventes Rops
jpc@rops.be
Tél : +32 (0)81 74 99 88 / +32(0)475 740 965
Salle de Ventes Rops
320, chaussée de Waterloo
5002 Namur
Belgique
www.rops.be

Buy Tintin at WünderTime.com

Tintin merchandise is a good investment

If there has ever been a time to start purchasing Tintin merchandise, it seems now is that time. The number of auctions, and the amounts bid at auction, for Tintin collectibles is growing at a break-neck pace in the run-up to the upcoming Tintin movie. The movie, scheduled for release November (Europe) and December 2011 (US), is a year away so there is still time to shop around before Spielberg starts flooding the world with Tintin Happy Meals.

Take the October 9, 2010 Artcurial acution in Paris. Tintin items sold for as high as $391,995 (US) and out of a total of 428 lots, the entire auction took in $1,639,758. What makes this auction so interesting, is that many of the collectibles were NOT limited editions or a one-off. A good portion of the lot included basic retail items that smart (or should I say “lucky”?) collectors bought and held on to long enough for the value to increase. The very same types of items sold now at our sister site, WunderTime.com (shameless plug!).

Hey! We sell - or sold - these items, too!

There were several amazing and very rare pieces, such as this original sketch, which sold for $119,774:

Another Tintin auction, also at Artcurial, is taking place on November 13, 2010 as part of a larger collection of “Comic Strips”, including such characters as our old friend Asterix. This lot holds some interesting items, and is most intriguing in the valuation of some more mundane merchandise such as holiday cards from the early 1940′s that are estimated to sell for 150 Euros each! Mon dieu! I should have kept a box or two from last year’s sets!!

1942/43 100-150 Euros

Given that the upcoming Tintin movie deals heavily with boats, it makes sense to auction these postcards now. It’s not a bad price for those new to auctions or with a limited budget:

Post cards estimated to fetch a modest 50 Euros

Auctions like these help to bolster the fact that Tintin is a big deal and getting bigger every year. All of us Tintin fans know this already but it seems like the rest of the world is getting used to the idea too.

Records Broken at Tintin Auction

According to the AFP, Tintin collectors are starting to take note of the rising value of Tintin collectibles. I attribute this at least partially to the upcoming Speilberg/Jackson movies. The movie is expected to dramatically increase the global awareness of Tintin, and because of a long history of keeping production numbers low, even smaller collections could see a large bump-up in value.

Here’s the AFP release:

BRUSSELS (AFP) — Tintin mania swept a Belgian auction house on Sunday with almost 600 lots associated with Hergé, creator of the famous cartoon reporter, breaking national and world sales records, an expert said.

The sale in Namur, southern Belgium, dominated by five large hand-drawn pages of original cartoon strips, raised 1,172,000 euros (1.57 million dollars), including charges, — a world record for Hergé-associated items and a cartoon strip book record in Belgium, said Thibaut Van Houtte, an expert on hand for the Rops auction house sale.

“It went well over even our upper pre-auction estimate of 650,000 euros,” he said.

The buyers came from all over Europe, as well as the United States, Lebanon and China.

However, Van Houtte was happy to say, the two highest-selling pages were bought by an anonymous Belgian collector.

The lot which the collector paid the most for was a hand-drawn page featuring Tintin, his faithful terrier Snowy and his crusty old sea-dog companion Captain Haddock made for the 1963 book “The Castafiore Emerald” which went for a total of 312,5000 euros, over three times its catalogue estimate, Van Houtte said.

The same collector also picked up a page of original drawings, including a spectacular car crash, as seen in the 1956 “The Calculus Affair”.

The boy reporter — the most loved figure in cartoon-mad Belgium’s history — first appeared on January 10, 1929 bound for the Soviet Union, in a supplement to the Roman Catholic Brussels weekly, Le Vingtieme Siecle.

It has been a long career that the death in 1983 of his creator, Georges Remi — alias Hergé — has not compromised, with his descendants refusing to hand over the rights to Tintin.