Artists & Illustrators — June 2017

(Nandana) #1
30 Artists & Illustrators

MASTERCLASS


KATE GREENAWAY MEDAL


Making amazing


children’s books


The annual award is the gold standard in illustration for youngsters.
Natalie Milner talks to two of this year’s shortlisted artists to get to the root of their success

Emily Gravett
The double winner is shortlisted again
this year for her new book Tidy

Your Instagram feed shows lots of doodles,
do you find these help your process?
I doodle all the time. Usually people, words or
even numbers, but also the characters I’m
considering using or animals that interest
me. Characters must have started as doodles.

How do you get personality into characters?
Part of doodling characters is learning their
personalities. I know how they would react in
situations. My website has had a rebuild, and
one of the features is Q&As for the
characters. I realised how well I know them.

I heard your pets have been ‘hands-on’ in
your illustration process...
The rats (now long deceased) were brilliant
nibblers and useful during the making of

Little Mouse’s Big Book of Fears. I coated
plain paper with yoghurt and left it in their
cage for ‘distressing’. I had a dog called Tip,
who I tried to get to chew the corner of an
illustration for my Wolves book, but he was
too well behaved so I had to chew it myself.

In Tidy, Pete (the badger) ends up destroying
the forest in his efforts to keep everything
just so. Where did this idea spring from?
Tidy started as a different idea about a
badger, mole and hamster going on a
treasure hunt, but I couldn’t make it work.
I started to think about what badgers eat
(worms) and what would happen if he
couldn’t get any worms, which made me ask
why he couldn’t get any worms. I was driving

home from the Hay Festival when I saw a
woman hoovering a car park. It seemed
excessively tidy, so I worked it into the book.

Your book is set in a forest. Do you have any
top tips for drawing trees?
I didn’t have a clue how to tackle all those
trees. I spent a lot of time staring at them,
thinking about the seasons, and looking at
how other people depict trees. I settled on
a mish-mash of approaches. I painted the

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