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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Illustrated Books, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Art By Committee

I've painted a lot of paperback covers. For each job I get a big thick manuscript. I use the old manuscripts for scratch paper. Once it a while I’ll turn a sheet of paper over to see what’s written on it. Sentences like this jump out at me:

“…Flames from the creature licked at his back. Something crackled around his head, and he realized his hair was on fire…”

For an illustrator like me, a line like that is hard to pass up. So I’ve snipped out a few of the best excerpts and stuck them out of context into the pages of a big blank sketchbook.


I call the book ART BY COMMITTEE. I bring it to coffee shops when I’m hanging out with other artists. The other artist might be my wife or it might be a couple of notable comic artists, painters, or animators. I can’t reveal their identities—in fact I can’t remember exactly who drew what. And don’t ask me what novel the excerpt came from. I have no clue.


While waiting for the scrambled eggs, we take turns illustrating the scraps of stories. Here’s a sample page. Click to enlarge. If you like this sort of thing, there’s more where it came from.

Tomorrow: Plein Air Ancestors

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2. Lit Graphic at the Rockwell

Last week Jeanette and I visited the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Massachusetts to see the exhibition called “Lit Graphic: The World of the Graphic Novel,” which is on view through May 26.

Co-curators Stephanie Plunkett and Martin Mahoney told us that Tom Wolfe invented the term “Lit Graphic” to describe the art form of the contemporary novel-length comic book, which has unfortunately been overlooked by most art museums.

Will Eisner, whose work on the groundbreaking Contract with God is well represented in the show, coined the more familiar term “graphic novel.” Another pioneer was Lynd Ward, who told wordless stories with woodcuts in the 1920s and 1930s. Forty-nine of those delicate images, each separately framed, festoon one wall.

Let me say a word about what is not in the exhibition. There are no French or Japanese comics, no daily or Sunday comic strips, and no Marvel or DC superhero comics. Although most of the works deal with serious, real-world themes, the curators stopped short of exhibiting work that is extremely violent or risqué. But that still leaves a diverse and vital field of talent.

In the room tracing the history of the graphic novels, there are some representative examples by Robert Crumb (including a teenage sketchbook) , but the other two rooms place the emphasis on the contemporary American scene.

As Mark Wheatley observes, graphic novels are not a genre, but "a language--and it's a visual language." Altogether, there are 146 works by 24 artists, including pages by Peter Kuper, Lauren Weinstein, Harvey Kurtzman, Marc Hempel, Dave Sim, Terry Moore and many others.

You can get an online preview of the work and the personalities by viewing the half-dozen mini-documentaries shot on location by producer Jeremy Clowe and recently posted on YouTube:
Part 1: Peter Kuper
Part 2: Marc Hempel
Part 3: Brian Fies
Part 4: Continued

The Rockwell Museum deserves a lot of credit for their pioneering spirit in championing American narrative art in all its forms. In conjunction with the Lit Graphic show, the museum is hosting a student graphic novel contest, inviting high schoolers from the northeastern US to submit their creations. Winners will be honored in a mini-exhibition at the museum. More information: Link.

Norman Rockwell himself explored personal, edgy themes like war and racism in his later career, and he was always supportive of young talent and new graphic ideas. I feel very sure that he would have been pleased to see the huge turnout of young people who attended the opening.

For museums interested in hosting one of the Rockwell Museum's traveling exhibitions (including Dinotopia), Link
Lit Graphic press release: Link
Reading list from TIME: Link

Tomorrow: Eye Bars

0 Comments on Lit Graphic at the Rockwell as of 2/7/2008 1:05:00 AM
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3. Mystery Artist Revealed

Radikin guessed it right: Today's painting called “Blossomed Furze” was by Beatrix Potter. Most of her famous books, like Peter Rabbit and Benjamin Bunny were based on her own pets by the same name. She carried them around with her on vacations and sketched them often. Throughout her life she made many studies of mushrooms, flowers, animals, birds, landscapes, and interiors, which still set a high standard of observation, even among natural science illustrators.

She was a stickler for truth to nature. As much as she adored Wind in the Willows, she once offered this gentle criticism:

Kenneth Grahame ought to have been an artist—at least all writers for children ought to have sufficient recognition of what things look like—did he not describe “Toad” as combing his hair? A mistake to fly in the face of nature—a frog may wear galoshes, but I don’t hold with toads having beards or wigs! So I prefer Badger.”

Artwork and quote from The Art of Beatrix Potter, © Frederick Warne Co, 1955.

Tomorrow: Motion Blur

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4. Color Storyboard

On an earlier post I described my method for doing storyboards in pencil. But for the second Dinotopia book, The World Beneath, I did all the storyboards in marker. I sketched each storyboard panel on bond paper about an inch and a half by three inches.

I used a hand-held waxer to apply a thin layer of beeswax on the back side of the panels. Waxers have become antique tools; they were used for pasting up elements in old-fashioned layouts. In this way I could reposition the storyboard panels over and over again as the sequences evolved and changed.

The basic story points are typed on pieces of paper below each storyboard panel.

7 Comments on Color Storyboard, last added: 12/13/2007
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5. Writing, Part 2: Thoughts on the Story

In a recent post I shared some thoughts about balancing words and pictures in a Dinotopia book. In this followup about the writing process, I’d like to say something about the approach to storytelling.

At one time I thought of a long-form picturebook as a kind of “movie for your hands.” I strove for a tight, three-act dramatic structure to the plot. I read all the books on the theory of writing screenplays for movies. (Below is an unused concept sketch for a 1995 film treatment.)

But I’ve gotten away from that way of thinking a bit, because I’m realizing more and more that a picturebook is not like a movie. It’s not ruled by time in the same way as a dramatic presentation. It’s more of a “springboard for daydreaming.” Pictures invite you to hit the pause button on the forward motion of the narrative. You can consider side trips and tangents.

With this in mind, I’ve tried to allow parts of the book, like the whole sequence in Sauropolis, to function a series of episodic diversions and thought experiments before we are grounded again in linear narrative movement.

You could create a full-length picturebook without any overarching story at all, and many masters have. Most of Rien Poortvliet’s books present a loosely connected improvisatory cascade of images. Faeries by Alan Lee and Brian Froud covered the subject topically without an overarching story. So did Arthur Spiderwick's Field Guide by Black and DiTerlizzi. Shaun Tan’s recent masterpiece, The Arrival, has a strong story, but no words at all.

I feel very passionate about extended-length visual books. I’m not even sure what to call the form. It’s not the same as a 32-page children’s picture book (at 160 pages, Dinotopia is five times as long), and it’s not like a graphic novel. Some people have called it a “visual novel” or a “long-form picture book.” But whatever you call it, the words and pictures are inextricably woven, and reinforce each other in all sorts of unexpected ways.

12 Comments on Writing, Part 2: Thoughts on the Story, last added: 12/16/2007
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6. Illustrated Classics

It’s hard for us to imagine the impact that illustrated books had a century ago, before movies and television commanded people’s imaginations. Back then a single new chromolithograph by NC Wyeth or Howard Pyle or Jessie Wilcox Smith was a rare pleasure, like seeing a shooting star or tasting a mango. A book with thirteen color plates was an extravagant feast. Today every time we open our mailbox there’s an avalanche of color pictures.

Like everyone else in my generation, I grew up with the TV blasting away in the background. The coffee table was three inches deep in color magazines. But somehow, by some strange magic, those illustrated classics spoke to me from their high shelf. “Take me down, savor me, I will take you to wonderful places,” they seemed to say. Each color plate sent a shiver down my spine.

Somehow I sensed the rarity and permanence of story illustrations, and I developed a hunger for them. Later, I found a paperback collection of Howard Pyle’s pictures. I bladed it and stuck the pictures all over the house. Those pictures were beacons for my imagination, a kind of steady refuge from the flickering world.

P.S. Sorry for the late post. We've been flying to the west coast today.

4 Comments on Illustrated Classics, last added: 12/2/2007
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7. Illustrated Monday: The Little House Series

Garthwi I was having a hard time deciding which book to feature on this week's Illustrated Monday until I read a column, in The Horn Book Magazine, about reissues.

Apparently, new versions of Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House books do not contain Garth Williams's drawings. Neither does his art appear on the covers. Instead, photographs are used.

Also, it seems that you have to pay US$2 more if you want the versions in which Williams' illustrations appear. However, you don't get the original  black-and-white pictures: they've all been colourised, which some may prefer. I don't!

A five-in-one book called A Little House Collection (below, left) has also been released. It comprises the first five Little House books (Little House in the Big Woods, Little House On the Prairie, On the Banks of Plum Creek, By the Shores of Silver Lake and The Long Winter). I have no idea why they didn't include Little Town on the Prairie and  These Happy Golden Years.

Says the columnist Terri Schmitz, "At 618 pages, with a whopping  forty-dollar price tag, A Little House Collection is almost impossible to handle, and in order to accommodate all of the text every page is divided into two columns, Littletowncollectionwith the art squeezed in willy-nilly. It's a shameful and unnecessary way to treat Mrs Wilder, whose books have given so much pleasure to so many children over the years. Her books deserve better than being reduced into a doorstop." Hear hear!

Anyway, after all that, this week's featured illustrations are by Garth Williams and from the Little House books.


Bigwoods1I went to the HarperCollins website to have a look at those new Little House books. Well, what do you think? I say, "TACKY!"

The following illustrations are from the Puffin editions of Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House series, illustrated by Garth Williams (click on the thumbnails for bigger versions of the pictures):

Garthwiii from Dance at Granpa's, pg 88 in Little House in the Big Woods






Garthwv from The House on the Prairie, pg 50 in Little House on the Prairie





Garthwvi from Runaway, pg 55 in On the Banks of Plum Creek







Garthwvii from Merry Christmas, pg 144 in By the Shores of Silver Lake






Garthwviii from Three Days' Blizzard, pg 81 in The Long Winter (that's Almanzo Wilder frying pancakes. Laura marries him in These Happy Golden Years)



Garthwix from Working in Town, pg 26 in Little Town on the Prairie





Garthwx from First Day of School, pg 20 in These Happy Golden Years

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8. Junior Reading Room

Five YA novels and a picture book are what's featured this week on Junior Reading Room. Cut out the coupon to enjoy a 20% discount at Kinokuniya Books.

Fragile Jade

F_28jade
The Nature of Jade
Author: Deb Caletti
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing, 304 pages
 

UNLIKE the substance she’s named after, Jade isn’t “stronger than steel”. The 18-year-old suffers from panic attacks and, in an attempt to calm herself, she volunteers at the zoo and is assigned to work with the elephants.   

Jade has another reason for wanting the job: Sebastian, the cute boy whom she had been “spying on” via the zoo’s webcam. As fate would have it, Jade and Sebastian meet and fall in love. However, he has a secret that threatens to destroy Jade’s hopes and dreams. Will she be strong enough to face the truth?   

F_28harmless
Harmless
Author: Dana Reinhardt
Publisher: Wendy Lamb Books, 240 pages
   

MARIAH, Anna, and Emma tell their parents that they’re going to the movies but instead, visit a boy from school. When the adults turn up at the cinema, it looks like the girls are going to get busted and so they continue lying to avoid punishment.   

They tell their parents that they were attacked by a stranger on their way to the movies, but what the friends don’t count on is for their fib to completely overtake their lives. Their parents make a police report, everyone at school labels them “heroes” and a man is actually arrested for the imagined crime.   

Each passing day leaves the girls feeling bad about their lie, but will their guilty conscience be enough to persuade them to come clean?   

F_28china
 

Un Lun Dun
Author: China Mieville
Publisher: Del Rey Books, 448 pages
   

DEEBA and Zanna discover a wheel that, when turned, makes London disappear! The pair then find themselves in UnLondon, an alternate world where the debris of the London they know end up!   

UnLondon is threatened by Smog, a poisonous cloud, which the girls try to destroy with the help of a talking magic book, and the most remarkable group of UnLondoners!   

This is an exciting and imaginative tome packed with surprises that will keep its readers in a state of constant delight, wonder and suspense.   

 

Ambergate
Author: Patricia Elliott
Publisher: Little, Brown Young Readers, 400 pages
   

F_28ambergate
THOSE who enjoyed Patricia Elliott’s haunting novel, Murkmere, will welcome Ambergate as an equally dark and even more disturbing read. It is not strictly a sequel, although it is set in the same world, since here, the focus is no longer on Aggie, the village girl who is employed as companion to the young mistress of the manor.   

Instead, Scuff, Murkmere Hall’s lonely and ill-used kitchen maid, is at the centre of this story. An orphan, Scuff has a dark secret that she fears would, if revealed, cost her her life.   

On hearing that she is being pursued by soldiers, she flees Murkmere, but for just how long and how far will she be able to avoid capture and the truth?   

 

Treasure Fleet: China Discovers the World
Author: Ann Bowler
Ilustrator: Lak-khee Tay-Audouard
Publisher: Tuttle Publishing, 32 pages
   

F_28adventure
THE Admiral Zheng He and his voyages around the world are the focus of this picture book. Much is made of the explorer Christopher Columbus, but 85 years before he discovered America, Admiral Zheng sailed the oceans in huge ships (longer than a football field). Starting in 1405, more than 300 of these vessels made their way from China, across the South China Sea to the Indian Ocean and the coast of Africa. These voyages of discovery did much for China’s trade and established the country and its emperor as powers to be reckoned with.   

The book is packed with beautiful illustrations and interesting facts although some may find the layout a little too “busy”, with the text packed too tight on each page.   

 

The Opposite of Music
Author: Janet Ruth Young
Publisher: Atheneum Books, 352 pages
   

F_28opposite
BILLY’S father goes from being simply a little distant to becoming a person whom Billy can no longer recognise. He stops listening to music, and eating and sleeping. He is depressed and withdrawn and refuses to be treated.   

It’s up to Billy and the rest of the family to help him, but, after a time, the strain of caring for Dad starts to become too much for everyone. Who will care for the carers?   

This painfully-honest novel explores the often-overlooked problems faced by those who devote their lives to caring for sick friends or relatives.

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9. Pictures in Books

Here are some of my favourite illustrated children's books. It would take too much space and time to list them all, but I will keep adding to the list.

1. Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild
Illustrated by Ruth Jervis who, coincidentally, was Streatfeild's sister. When she was hired, Streatfeild's publisher had no idea of her connection to the author.

2. The Candlemas Mystery by Ruth M. Arthur
Illustrated by Margery Gill

3. Dido and Pa by Joan Aiken
Illustrated by Pat Marriott

4. Another Lucky Dip by Ruth Ainswroth
Illustrated by Shirley Hughes

5. Winter Holiday by Arthur Ransome
Illustrated by Arthur Ransome

6. The Gardens of Dorr by Paul Biegel
Illustrated by Eva-Johanna Rubin

7. Uncle Cleans Up by J. P. Martin
Illustrated by Quentin Blake

8. Minnow on the Say by Philppa Pearce
Illustrated by Edward Ardizzone

9. The Edge of the Cloud by K. M. Peyton
Illustrated by Victor G. Ambrus

10. The Glass Slipper by Eleanor Farjeon
Illustrated by Ernest H. Shepard

11. The Adventures of Chunky by Leila Berg
Illustrated by George Downs

12. Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder
Illustrated by Garth Williams

13. The Little Book Room by Eleanor Farjeon
Illustrated by Edward Ardizone

14. The Glassblower's Children by Maria Gripe
Illustrated by Harald Gripe

Haraldgripe An illustration from The Glassblower's Children.

18 March 2007, Star Mag

Illuminating illustrations

I’M happy to see some really nicely illustrated, newly published children’s books in the stores. I don’t mean picture books, which, obviously, have to be illustrated, but storybooks, what the Americans call chapter books.

Once upon a time, most storybooks were illustrated. If you’re in your 30s or 40s (and older) you may remember wonderful books published by Puffin (always edited by Kay Webb) with black and white drawings. 

Probably the most famous illustrated children’s storybooks are Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass and A.A. Milne’s Winnie the Pooh and The House at Pooh Corner

When I spoke to writer/illustrator John Burningham a few years ago, he said that the main reason storybooks are no longer illustrated is because it adds to the cost of production (in terms of printing and having to pay the illustrator).

He also thought that, somewhere along the line, publishers decided that children, having made the transition from picture books with minimal text to full-length books, no longer needed their stories illustrated.

Shirley Hughes, an award-winning illustrator who has worked on both picture books and storybooks, says, in her autobiography, A Life Drawing, “It is sad that the black and white illustrations once so common in books for older children are now often cut out and the jump from full-colour picture books to an unventilated page of solid text is such an abrupt one.

“We are depriving the child reader of the intense pleasure of opening books, even penalising them for having mastered the magic skill of reading”.

Is there anyone who doesn’t love looking at beautiful pictures? I think even adults would welcome illustrations in the books they read. A picture is sometimes what is needed to unlock the magic of a book, pique the reader’s interest, prod his imagination into action, as it were.

Mervyn Peake’s Gormeghast trilogy features a few black and white line drawings (by the author) that are, to say the least, intriguing. And one of the reasons I loved Reader’s Digest Condensed Books was because they were illustrated. I would pore over the pictures when I was little. The stories didn’t interest me until much, much later.

When people complain about wanting to be left alone with their own ideas of what characters and scenes are like, my response is, “So you’re saying you have a limited imagination?” This usually leads to an argument, sometimes rather heated.

Some say the presence of illustrations interfere with the pictures that pop into their heads when they read a book. They are annoyed when the artist’s portrayal of a character doesn’t match the author’s description. Actually, I understand how they feel as that is my response to movie adaptations of novels.

But somehow, to me, a static drawing, no matter how lively in feel, never intrudes on one’s imagination in quite the same way as a walking, talking actor does (ie, Gwyneth Paltrow in Emma and Possession). Illustrations simply capture moments and interpret emotions. I like to think of them as reflections of the author’s words. They do not consume and assume his ideas like bad acting or a miscast actor can.

The next time you’re in a second-hand bookshop, look out for children’s storybooks published in the 1970s and earlier. Browse through them so you can choose the ones with illustrations. And look out for illustrators like Pat Marriott, Shirley Hughes, Peggy Fortnum, Margery Gill, Garth Williams and Edward Ardizzone.

If you’re shopping for new books, check out The Mysterious Benedict Society (by Trenton Lee Stewart, ISBN: 978-031-605-7776), The Invention of Hugo Cabret (by Brian Selznick, ISBN: 978-043-981-3785), The Valley of Secrets (by Charmian Hussey, ISBN: 978-068-987-8626) and The Seven Wonders of Sassafras Springs (by Betty G. Birney, ISBN: 978-141-693-4899).

They are just some of the beautifully and imaginatively illustrated children’s books that are now available. Perhaps publishers are beginning to realise that most people are never too old or serious for pictures. 

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