This home page is consecrated to a personnage of strip cartoon, Rahan, the fierce ages' son. there is obviously a lot of graphics
Rahan.org ,  site of Rahan, fierce ages'son


© Roger Lécureux for storys
©André Chéret for drawing
© Marc Rioux for web site

The  authors : Roger Lecureux. - Andre Cheret.

Le site en FrancaisVersion
française

English pages about Rahan, great french comics.

 

Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo...

Created by Roger Lecureux and Andre Cheret, Rahan is a comics caractere published in Pif Gadget Magazin for the first time, about 1969.

Rahan is a hero of more 180 stories, short (11 pages) or great (about 40 pages) all stories is now in 24 books (only in french version for the moment) more 3500 pages in total.

Adapted in cartoon for TV (26x 26 minutes) only in french to.

Rahan is very popular in France,he is a classical comics.

Just now Rahan have a lot of news, new stories from a new editor and any product about this hero:

Toys, pictures, statuette, expose ...

and some projects:

films and new cartoons ...

If you have a editing in a no french language, please contact me with message or an .

Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo... Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo... Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo... Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo...
Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo... Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo...
 
Rahan sur You Tube

Rahan by Xilam in vidéo

You can see the first pictures for the new Rahan's cartoon by Xilam on You tube ... And in English !!!

See now on You Tube
And you opimion on Rahan.org' s chat (in english or in french).

  Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo...
Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo... Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo...

 


all in french !
All about new book (june 2008):

La horde des bannis
(The horde for banned)

In french only

All in lot of news : Statuette, exposition, cartoons in video ... (in french)

 

Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo...

New cartoon, by Xilam at the TV in 2009,

on France 3 for France
and RAI for Italy...
And for all country ...

see on Xilam web site


Summary of Crao's son
(all pages only in french for the moment):

Cyanotype Daydream - -the Girl Who Dreamed The Wo...

Much like Anna Atkins, the first female photographer who used cyanotypes to document algae, the girl "prints" the people in her life as specimens. They are categorized, flattened, and preserved, highlighting her inability to interact with them in three dimensions. IV. Symbolic Resonance: The Permanent Blue

The world-building within the story utilizes the specific aesthetic qualities of the cyanotype:

In her dreams, what is solid in reality appears as white (the lack of exposure), while the voids and shadows become the deepest blues. This inversion suggests a protagonist who finds substance in the absences of life. Cyanotype Daydream -The Girl Who Dreamed the Wo...

The external pressure of the waking world that forces the dream into visibility.

The cyanotype, discovered by Sir John Herschel in 1842, is unique among photographic processes for its reliance on iron salts rather than silver. The resulting "Prussian Blue" is a color of deep stability but also one born of a chemical reaction triggered by ultraviolet light. In the narrative of The Girl Who Dreamed the World , this process is not merely an artistic hobby; it is the ontological framework of her reality. Every dream she experiences is "exposed" by the sun and "washed" in the water of her subconscious, leaving behind a world etched in monochromatic shadows. II. The Chemistry of the Subconscious Much like Anna Atkins, the first female photographer

To understand the protagonist’s daydream, one must understand the chemical architecture of her visions:

This paper explores the intersection of early photographic processes and subconscious manifestation through the lens of "Cyanotype Daydream." Specifically, it examines the narrative of a young protagonist whose internal world is rendered exclusively in Prussian Blue—a byproduct of the ferric ammonium citrate and potassium ferricyanide reaction. By analyzing the chemistry of the cyanotype as a metaphor for permanence and fragility, this study posits that the "daydream" serves as a bridge between the physical Victorian archive and the fluid nature of adolescent imagination. I. Introduction: The Iron Sun The cyanotype, discovered by Sir John Herschel in

The "Daydream" is a state of permanent exposure. Unlike the fleeting nature of standard dreams, a cyanotype dream is fixed. Once the "girl" sees a version of the world, it is rinsed of its color and becomes a permanent blue record. This creates a psychological tension: her world is beautifully consistent, yet it lacks the warmth of the full spectrum. III. The Architecture of Prussian Blue

Last update : November 2008

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