He followed with Jungle Tales of Tarzan (1976), integrating previously unattempted techniques such as hidden, covert, and negative space imagery with inspired color themes into a harmonious visual description, a pinnacle of narrative art.
William Hogarth | Edward Burne-Jones | Hogarth | Steve Hogarth | Hogarth Press | Burne Hogarth | Georgina Hogarth | Cupid and Psyche (Burne-Jones painting) | Alfred Burne | ''The Annunciation'' as depicted in an oil on canvas by Edward Burne-Jones | ''March of the Guards to Finchley'' (1750), William Hogarth | Hogarth Roundabout | Georgiana Burne-Jones | David George Hogarth | Burne |
After he obtained his Degree in graphic design from CEGEP of Rivière-du-Loup, he learned the craft of comic book especially by observing the work of artists like John Buscema, Harold Foster, Burne Hogarth, Jean Giraud dit Moebius, Jack Kirby, Barry Windsor-Smith, and also André Juillard.