City authorities hope to soothe those who are ‘deeply shocked’ by the comic-strip trail of Belgium’s rich history

In the centre of Brussels, close to the monumental Palais de Justice, is a brightly coloured cartoon painted down a strip of a scruffy four-storey building. Playing on the stories of crime and judgment unfolding in the nearby courtrooms, the mural shows heaven and hell. In the blue skies, a caricatured police officer flies over a topless woman sunbathing, while a white officer eyes a black man; down below, the red-tailed devil looks grumpy.

The work, from a popular cartoon that first appeared in the 1980s, is just one of 68 murals celebrating Belgium’s rich history of comic strips, or bandes dessinées, including figures such as Tintin, Lucky Luke and the Smurfs.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Rachel Reeves says fiscal picture ‘very different’ to when Labour made £28bn green pledge

Shadow chancellor says flagship green policy had to be approached in a…

‘Stalking is a unique kind of trauma’: The woman who turned her 13-year ordeal into a terrifying podcast

Stories of the Stalked sees its creator Lily Baldwin put listeners at…

Russia and Ukraine trade accusations over fatal military plane crash

Moscow had accused Kyiv of downing plane it said was carrying Ukrainian…