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AI for creating comics? Europe’s industry completely rejects it, Tintin executive says


Generative AI tools, such as Midjourney, use a machine-learning algorithm – trained on artists’ images – to generate pictures in minutes.

Street art featuring characters from Asterix in Brussels, Belgium. Photo: Getty Images

This has triggered a “complete rejection” of AI in the European comic-book industry, according to Gauthier van Meerbeeck, editorial director at Le Lombard.

His firm publishes The Adventures of Tintin, about an intrepid boy-reporter who is now almost a century old.

Created by Hergé, Tintin became known for his blond quiff, baggy plus fours and trusty sidekick, Snowy the dog, and is considered an icon in what is now a global industry.

“[AI-generated] art is generated by stealing from artists,” van Meerbeeck says. “So morally I could never get involved in that.”

Belgian cartoonist Georges Prosper Remi, aka Hergé, works at home in Brussels, in 1975. Photo: Getty Images

Across the Atlantic, Disney sparked controversy in June 2023 by using AI-generated images in Marvel’s Secret Invasion, and the boom in generative AI has spawned a flurry of lawsuits in the United States.

Prominent tech companies, from Microsoft-backed OpenAI to Meta Platforms, have been hit with copyright cases by artists who say AI profited from their work without permission or compensation.

European comic-book publishing houses are gearing up for litigation when new EU rules under the AI Act kick in in mid-2025. These will force tech firms to be transparent about training inputs, opening them up to potential copyright lawsuits.

“It’s huge for publishers,” says Quentin Deschandelliers, legal adviser at the Federation of European Publishers, explaining that if you want to litigate, you need to “know what is under the hood”.

He says the incoming law may push tech firms towards licensing agreements to compensate artists if their work is used to train a generative AI model.

Amid growing scrutiny over copyright, several big tech companies that trained their AI using others’ output have already signed content-licensing deals with media outlets, such as OpenAI with the Financial Times and Google with News Corp.

A still taken from the AI-generated intro to the Disney+ Marvel show Secret Invasion. Photo: Marvel

However, some publishers and authors are afraid of “giving away the keys to the kingdom”, explains Deschandelliers, over fears of AI-generated works flooding the markets.

Courtroom battles aside, artists are also wondering whether to harness or reject the new tools.

Belgian comic book artist Marnix Verduyn, who goes by the pseudonym NIX, describes himself as a computer engineer who “accidentally became a comic book artist”. He chose to train a generative algorithm on his own comics, joking that he had a fantasy of replacing himself to spend more time at the beach.

But his fellow comic artists did not find it so funny, especially when OpenAI’s generative AI model Dall-E came out in 2021. It was a watershed moment.

“It was a shock how powerful it was,” Verduyn says. “That’s when I thought there’s a lot of people who are not going to have jobs in the future.”

A mural in Brussels, Belgium. Photo: Shutterstock

In Europe, the cultural sector employed 7.7 million people in 2022, while its net turnover was some €448 billion (US$480 billion) in 2021, according to European Commission business statistics.

NIX believes his use of AI – taking on low-skilled, repetitive tasks – is “gently disruptive” and necessary to keep up with competition from Japanese and US comic-book giants.

But recent art graduates are worked up over entry-level jobs they might once have filled now being taken by machines.

“It’s cheap, fast, no humans needed, and it kills any kind of artistic endeavour in the industry,” Sarah Vanderhaegen says. The 24-year-old Belgian described how a brush with AI during an internship left her crushed, forcing her to reconsider her options – and seeing her pivot to an archaeology degree.

Street art in Brussels. Photo: Shutterstock

Now working on a comic book in her spare time, she sees AI as a bogus short-cut powered by an algorithm that can never hope to match an artist’s ability to translate emotions onto a page – a point where artists and publishers agree.

“AI-generated images, I can spot them straight away,” says van Meerbeeck, who thinks comics are safe for now, as storyline, text and images remain too complex for the current crop of generative AI to create.

For NIX, the human remains the boss, AI a mere tool.

“It’s just a cocktail of ideas stolen from somebody. I see the mathematics [of AI, and] there’s no soul in the mathematics.”



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