The Last Additional Train: Jungle Train (Signed) (Limited Edition)

The Last Additional Train: Jungle Train art by Jean-Claude Forest

The Last Additional Train: Jungle Train (Signed) (Limited Edition)


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Very rare signed hand-numbered silkscreen print #287 of 370.

Artist: Jean-Claude Forest
Medium: Numbered Limited edition Silkscreen print on Paper
Size: 29" x 20" (730mm x 500mm)
Date: 1984
Signature: Signed by artist in pencil, bottom right
Code: ForestTrainTravel

This is a Signed Limited edition print.

This beautiful limited edition signed print on Velin Arches paper was originally painted for a Portfolio with a short story written by Pierre Christin (Le Dernier Train Supplémentaire) and published by Alain Beaulet in 1984.

Pounding with dynamic energy, Forest's illustration is a feast to the senses, brilliantly capturing the excitement and energy of travel.

This incredibly rare print from the early 1980s is signed and hand numbered 287/370.
  • Artist Biography
    Jean-Claude Forest (11 September 1930 - 29 December 1998; Paris, France)
    Jean-Claude Forest was born in Le Perreux-sur-Marne, a Paris suburb, and graduated from the Paris School of Design in the early 1950s and immediately began working as an illustrator.

    While at the Paris School of Design Forest drew his first comic strip, Flèche Noire (The Black Arrow). After creating Le Vaisseau Hanté (The Ghost Ship) he illustrated several issues of Charlot, a popular French comic book series loosely based on Charlie Chaplin.

    Forest eventually became the premier cover artist of French publisher Gallimard's leading French science-fiction paperback imprint, Le Rayon Fantastique, also drawing covers for numerous French newspapers and magazines including France Soir. Together with renowned film director Alain Resnais, Forest was one of the founders of the French Comic-Strip Club in the early 1960s.

    Forest became world famous when he created the sexy sci-fi strip Barbarella, which was originally published in France in V Magazine in 1962. The strip was an immediate bestseller and was soon translated into a dozen languages. In 1967 it was adapted by Terry Southern and Roger Vadim and made into a major motion picture, with Forest acting as design consultant.

    Forest created many other cartoons and comic books, also writing scripts for comic strips and for French television.

    He was awarded the Grand Prize at the 1984 Angoulême Comics Festival and in Sierre (Switzerland) in 1986.

    Jean-Claude Forest suffered from severe asthma for many years and died in 1998 at the age of 68.
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FREE DELIVERY

£0.00
£240.00
In Stock