French Comics Festival Pulls Guest of Honor After Critics Said His Work Promotes Child Abuse

Warning: This story contains graphic descriptions some readers may find disturbing.

The Angoulême International Comics Festival, the second largest of such events in Europe, has removed French illustrator Bastien Vivés as its guest of amid fresh criticism that his work promotes incest, paedophilia, and child pornography. The festival is scheduled to run January 26- 29.

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The guest of honor typically produces and designs an exhibition of wholly original artwork that would debut at the festival and be on view until March 12, however the announcement prompted international headlines, several detailed explainers, and an online petition garnering more than 110,000 signatures.

Vivés’ has work has drawn critical acclaim and controversy in equal measure, in particular three of his books — 2011’s Les Melons de la Colère, 2018’s Le Petit Paul, and 2018’s La Décharge Mentale — which portray sex scenes between several children and their siblings, parents, and a male adult friend of the family. One young farmer-boy who appears in two of these books receives extra sexual attention from his sister and older women for his “unusually large penis”.

Pointed concerns from critics

Critics, including child protection agencies and feminists, say the 38-year-old’s graphic novels, though fictional, promote incest and child pornography through their repeated depictions of sex involving minors. The artist and his publishers defended the comic works by citing creative freedom in portraying “forbidden fantasies”.

In response to an online petition, some stores in France have chosen not to stock his book Le Petit Paul. Emma, a French cartoonist who went viral for her online comic on the invisible “mental load” of women, has publicly criticized the board of the comics festival and Vivés’ work on her social media channels. On Twitter she denounced violent statements Vivés has previously made about her, including a Facebook post in which he wishes for her death and for her child to experience anal rape whenever her posts are liked on the social media platform.

The criticism has reignited scrutiny over how issues of consent and paedophilia are addressed by France’s public and community of artists. In 2021, it became illegal in France to publish representing a minor in a pornographic way, adding to the criticism and allegations against Vivés.

On December 14, the Angoulême International Comics Festival released a press statement that said “new developments have radically changed the nature of this situation and have made it necessary for the Festival to cancel this exhibition”, citing threats of physical violence aimed toward the festival team, Vivés, and festival attendees as the reason. The statement also said that the festival was not aware of many of the comments made by Vivès “which may seem to some people to be very shocking and/or inappropriate”.

After Vivès was removed from the comics festival, he posted a statement on Instagram condemning paedophilia, rape culture, and violence towards women. He also apologized for his comments towards the comics artist Emma.

Source: artnews.com

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