Born in LiΓ¨ge on November 16th, 1965, FrΓ©dΓ©ric Seron, known as "Clarke," could do almost anythingβplaying instruments, speaking Spanish, composing songs in German, writing in Danish, singing in Latin... and producing an unbelievable number of comic strips every week. After studying at the School of Fine Arts and Architecture, he went into fashion illustration before falling for comics while contributing to local collective publications ("Qui a tuΓ© FranΓ§ois WalthΓ©ry" and "B.D. Mode, c'est belge"). In 1987, he published his first personal work for publisher Khani, entitled "Rebecca - Bon anniversaire, Papy," based on a script by another beginner, FranΓ§ois Gilson, who hardly left his side again. The weekly comics magazine "Spirou" featured his series "Cambrioleurs," written by Crosky, and the fantasy mini-strips "Africa Jim," illustrated by Gilson. It was with Gilson that Clarke discovered the charms of witchcraft by launching "MΓ©lusine" in 1992. Bewitched, Dupuis quickly gave the eternal witch's apprentice her very own series. The Humour Libre collection later allowed him to diversify his work and audience. Based on scripts by Yann, he blithely massacred the biographies of respectable authors Andersen and Perrault with the series "Sales petits contes" (Dirty Little Tales). Over the years, Clarke has never stopped seeking new horizons, and the result is a body of work that features everything from political satireβwith "Mister President" (Le Lombard; Europe Comics in English)βto societal critiques, such as with his graphic novel "Les Danois" (Le Lombard; "The Danes," Europe Comics). His latest work includes the paranormal adventure series "Urbex" (Le Lombard; Europe Comics in English), created alongside writer Dugomier.