André François
André François (born André Farkas; November 9, 1915 – April 11, 2005) was a French cartoonist.
He was born to a Hungarian Jewish family in Temesvár, Austria-Hungary (now Timişoara, Romania), he moved to Paris in 1934, and became a French citizen in 1939.
He worked as a painter, sculptor and graphic designer, but is best remembered for his cartoons, whose subtle humor and wide influence bear comparison to those of Saul Steinberg. François initially worked for French leftist newspapers (Le Nouvel Observateur) and illustrated books by authors such as Jacques Prévert, but gradually reached a larger audience, publishing in leading magazines of the United Kingdom (Punch) and the United States (The New Yorker). He became a close friend and collaborator of Ronald Searle.
He died in his home in Grisy-les-Plâtres, in the Val-d'Oise département.
References
- Anne-Claude Lelieur et Raymond Bachollet, André François, Bibliothèque Forney, 2003, ISBN 2843311160
External links
- Obituary in The Times
- André François at Pbase
- André François at AskArt
- (French) André François's 2004 exhibition at the Centre Pompidou
- (Romanian) "Timişoreanul André François, un caricaturist celebru", in Evenimentul Zilei
Categories
1915 births | 2005 deaths | French cartoonists | French illustrators | French painters | French sculptors | French Jews | Hungarian painters | Hungarian sculptors | Hungarian Jews | People from Timişoara
