Sik Jun Jung was born December 2, 1965, in Seoul, Korea. Adopted by a Belgian family in 1971, it takes for adoption Jung Henin name. It follows studies of Humanities Classics (latin and mathematics) at the Athénée Royal de Rixensart, before attending a year, in 1985, the Saint-Luc in Brussels workshop. He then studied at the Academy of the fine arts in Brussels, in section Illustration. At the same time, he made a brief stint in the cartoon, at la Cambre. It was in 1987 that his career took a decisive turning point, since he met Marc Michetz, who introduced in the magazine Spirou. This allows it to illustrate some short stories in Spirou and Tintin. He worked then a few months in the Studio and Yslaire Darasse, and also illustrated the covers of the Belgian Business Magazine. In 1991, Jung published the first of the four volumes of Yasuda, in Helyode-Lefranc. The purpose of his drawings is for it to transpire emotions, feelings, with characters present, alive. In 1997, in collaboration with Martin Ryelandt, he made the young girl and the wind, to Éditions Delcourt. The Asian world of this series of heroic fantasy is a return to its Korean origins, and the fantastic allows him to strengthen the evocative side of his drawing, especially for the hero: the wind. He signed with Kwaidan his first screenplay, a new series that amazes with the beauty of direct colours and subtle and refined poetry which emanates from this Japanese tale.
번역되고, 잠시 기다려주십시오..
