Grzegorz Rosiński


Grzegorz Rosiński is a Polish comic book artist. He is best known for providing the artwork for the series Thorgal.

Early life

Grzegorz Rosiński was born in Stalowa Wola in 1941. In 1967 he graduated the Liceum of Fine Arts in Warsaw and then joined the Academy of Fine Arts of Warsaw.

Career

Until the late 1970s he authored numerous book illustrations for various Polish publishers and authors. He also authors some of the most popular Polish comic book series of the time, including the Illustrated History of Poland, Kapitan Żbik and Pilot śmigłowca. Initially publishing his comic books only in newspapers and magazines, with time his works started to be published separately. He is also the creator and the first editor of the Relax magazine, the first Polish language magazine devoted solely to comic books.
In 1976 Rosiński received a scholarship in Belgium, where he met Jean Van Hamme, who wrote for him the series Thorgal, one of the most popular European comic book series. Since 1980, 31 volumes have been published. The comic has appeared in Tintin magazine. Rosiński also has made some comics for the Spirou magazine, under the pseudonym 'Rosek'. Although he returned to Poland, he continued in the next decades to collaborate with Belgian and French authors. In 1980 he started another successful series of comic books named Hans, this time with André-Paul Duchâteau. In 1992 Rosiński was replaced by Zbigniew Kasprzak as the artist of the series.
After the imposition of the Martial Law in Poland in 1981, Rosiński moved to Belgium. At first, he lived with Jean Van Hamme while his wife and three kids stay behind in Warsaw. A few years later he received Belgian citizenship. He became one of the most popular authors of comic books in Western Europe. Among his later works are a series Chninkel started in 1987 and a 1992 series titled La complainte des landes perdues. In 2001 the Rosiński-Van Hamme duo published yet another comic book titled Western, based on a western plot, in which Rosiński changed his style considerably. Since 2004 he published a series on Count Skarbek.
During the summer of 2011, a major exhibition was shown in the medieval town of Saint-Ursanne, Switzerland.

Personal life

Currently, Grzegorz Rosiński lives in Switzerland.

Selected bibliography