'Sans Famille' (Dutch-language edition of 'Alleen Op De Wereld', serialized in Donald Duck, 1959).
In the late 1940s, Jacques Blondeau worked for Paul Winkler's Agency. Between 1949 and 1951, his comic series 'Lil' ran in L'Aurore, assisted by Martine Berthelemy.
During the 1950s and 1960s, Blondeau was one of the foremost artists of the Opera Mundi agency. Among the most important daily series he illustrated for this agency, were 'Arsène Lupin' (in Parisien Libéré), 'Lil' and 'Maigret' (in Samedi Soir). Apart from these balloon series, Blondeau made text comic adaptations of novels (with the text below the images), including 'L'Assassinat d'Henry IV', 'Les Dossieres de l'Agence O' and 'Vingt Mille Lieuses Sous les Mers'.
'20,000 Lieues Sous les Mers', presumably by Blondeau (Le Samedi, 1952).
In the 1960s, Blondeau worked on such vertical strips as 'Le Cercle de Famille', 'L'Empreinte du Dieu', 'Fromont Jeune et Risler Ainé', 'L'Or du Cristobal', 'Les Hommes en Blanc' and episodes of 'Une Histoire par Semaine', 'Destins Hors Série' and 'Les Grandes Nouvelles d'Hier et Aujourd'hui'.
'Arsène Lupin - Gentleman-Cambrioleur' (Le Samedi, 26 January 1957).
In 1954, Blondeau illustrated 'Les Grands Espions' on large color pages in Lectures Pour Tous. From 1958 on, he cooperated regularly on Le Journal de Mickey, and for this magazine he adapted novels into comics ('Helvgor du Fleuve Bleu', 'Sans Famillle') and illustrated series such as 'Lancelot', 'La Petite Annie' and 'Tim la Brousse'. In the late 1960s, he was terminally ill and committed suicide in 1967. He was 43 years old.
'Arsène Lupin - Gentleman-Cambrioleur' (Le Samedi, 26 January 1957).