The Adventures of Jodelle (original title Les Aventures de Jodelle) is a 1966 French erotic comic drawn by Guy Peellaert and scripted by Pierre Bartier.
[1][2] Many of the characters looks were taken from public pop figures of the past and present; Jodelle herself looks like French singer Sylvie Vartan, stereotyped as the girl next door fiancée,[3] while other characters are look-alikes of Emperor Augustus, The Beatles, Pope Paul VI,[3] James Bond, Marquis de Sade,[2] Frank Lloyd Wright's architecture of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum,[4] and Jesus Christ.
[2] In a Pop version of Imperial Rome, neon ads promote "stripteases and Christian slaughters.
"[1] Jodelle was the first pop art book by Peellaert, followed up by Pravda (never published in English), one year later.
A somewhat likeminded comic book that appeared was Phoebe Zeit-Geist.