ARTFEED — Contemporary Art Intelligence

Albert Uderzo, Co-Creator of Asterix Comics, Dies at 92

other · 2026-04-20

Albert Uderzo, the French cartoonist who co-created the beloved Asterix comic series with writer René Goscinny, has died. Born in 1927 to Italian parents in France, Uderzo first worked as an aircraft engineer before meeting Goscinny in 1951. Their collaboration began with the comic Oumpah-pah le Peau-Rouge before they launched Asterix and Obelix, Gaulish warriors whose adventures debuted in the inaugural issue of Pilote magazine. The series rapidly achieved popularity across French-speaking regions. Following Goscinny's death in 1977, Uderzo assumed writing duties and continued the franchise until selling the rights to Hachette in 2009. The Asterix universe expanded into numerous adaptations including animated films, video games, books, and even a theme park. Uderzo's death marks the end of an era for one of Europe's most iconic comic creations.

Key facts

  • Albert Uderzo died in 2020
  • He co-created Asterix with René Goscinny
  • Uderzo was born in 1927 to Italian parents in France
  • He initially worked as an aircraft engineer
  • Uderzo met Goscinny in 1951
  • Their first collaboration was Oumpah-pah le Peau-Rouge
  • Asterix debuted in Pilote magazine's first issue
  • Uderzo took over writing after Goscinny's 1977 death
  • He sold Asterix rights to Hachette in 2009
  • The franchise spawned cartoons, films, games, books, and a theme park

Entities

Artists

  • Albert Uderzo
  • René Goscinny

Institutions

  • Pilote magazine
  • Hachette

Locations

  • France
  • Italy

Sources