For Featured Illustrator this month we spotlight Manchester based artist Anna Violet. A familiar presence in SCBWI and contributor to Words & Pictures
, Anna's tactile and vibrant illustrations are rendered in a wide variety of materials including watercolour, ink and collage, all tied together with her own idiosyncratic style. See the Featured Illustrator Gallery for more examples of her work. Personal path
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Anna Violet - self portrait as a child |
I was a child in the 1960s. I grew up with illustrations by Jean Primrose (
Miss Happiness and Miss Flower, author Rumer Godden, 1961), Maurice Wilson (
Fables from Aesop retold by James Reeves, 1961), Shirley Hughes (
My Naughty Little Sister, author Dorothy Edwards, 1969) Alice and Martin Provensen (
Iliad and the Odyssey, retold by Jane Werner Watson, 1965) and Maurice Sendak (
Where the Wild Things Are, 1964).
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Maurice Wilson's illustrations captivated me, especially his foxes |
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This book even had instructions on how to make a Japanese house! |
Clumsy, messy and shy, I pondered on whether pigs could really fly and if fairies and harvest mice roamed wild in our garden. When I wasn't arguing with my brothers, looking after my mice or searching for dragons with my fairy wand, I had my nose in a book and my fingers in the pencils, mud and modelling clay. I was really chuffed to win a runner-up consolation prize in a Kellogg's Cornflakes competition for my drawing of a tram. I was also very proud of a Japanese doll's house I made from firelighters.
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My drawing of a bus. |
I didn't want to grow up, but accepted the inevitable when I hit my my teens. I trained and worked as a landscape architect for over 15 years, for three different councils. Armed with a parallel motion drawing board, a set square and stencils, I drew onto large sheets of tracing paper with technical drawing pens, scratched out mistakes with scalpel blades, and coloured-in dyeline prints with pantone pen markers. Computer-aided design was a mere speck on the horizon. Sometimes, I also had fun making models for meetings. At weekends, I made mess with clay and slip-trailers.
Paints, wobbly lines and happy accidents
When I became a mother in my thirties, I revisited childhood. My first born developed type 1 diabetes as a toddler and I became very focussed on home. It was a joy to rediscover picture books and children's fiction and share them with my children. I was impressed by Gerald Rose (
Ahh Said Stork, 1977), John Burningham (
Oi Get Off Our Train, 1989), Nick Butterworth (
After The Storm, 1992), Margaret Bloy Graham (
Harry the Dirty Dog, author Gene Zion, 1956), Cressida Cowell (
How to Train Your Dragon series), Dave McKean (
Varjak Paw series, author SF Said, 2003), Antony Browne (
Voices in the Park, 1998), Patrick Benson (
Owl Babies, author Martin Waddell, 1992), Satoshi Kitamura (
Angry Arthur, author Hiawyn Oram, 1997) and Sam Lloyd (
Mr Pusskins, 2006).
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I love all the different marks Sam Lloyd uses in her illustrations. |
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One of my paintings from 1990s. |
I loved messing around with paints, wobbly lines and happy accidents, without the constraints of technical drawing. I exhibited in galleries and did craft sessions with children. In 2006, I was lucky to get the chance to do a degree in illustration and get up to speed with computer technology and contemporary illustration at Stockport College, a bus-ride away. I graduated in 2009. I was introduced to the work of graphic designers and illustrators, including Paul Rand, Saul Steinberg, Christopher Corr and Beatrice Alemagna. I experimented with new toolkits (especially ink and string) and developed collage skills. I learnt the value of playfulness and I learnt the mantra, 'Less is More'. I started to sell limited edition prints of Manchester scenes and do decorative maps and commissions.
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Decorative map for National Trust leaflet 2010 (Anna Violet) |
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Castlefield area in Manchester (Anna Violet) |
Technique
I begin my images by sketching and playing around with marks. Then I cut, scan, copy and collage. I do lots of observational drawings in my sketchbooks, and sometimes these lead to ideas.
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My sketchbook pages with start of hedgehog character |
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My sketchbook images from Cheshire Show 2014. Start of new goat character. |
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My sketchbook images from Cheshire Show 2014 |
In 2009, I joined SCBWI and shared stories with other illustrators and writers in crit groups, both online and in the Manchester group. In 2010, I won the
Undiscovered Voices Tribute Illustration competition.
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My winning entry for scbwi Undiscovered Voices Tribute Illustration competition |
I went to SCBWI masterclasses and the SCBWI conference 2011. I started to appreciate author-illustrators Catherine Rayner (
Augustus and His Smile, 2006), Alexis Deacon (
Beegu, 2003), Helen Stephens (
How to Hide a Lion, 2014), Lizzy Finlay (
Dandylion, 2009), Sarah McIntyre (
Sharks in the Bath, 2014) and Jon Klassen. In 2013, I won the
SCBWI Promo Mailer competition and my prickly hedgehog image was selected for the 2013/2014 touring SCBWI Illustration Showcase. My illustrations have been published in Oxford Reading Tree Books in 2011 (How
Anansi Got His Stories, level 8) and 2014 (
Big Ears and Sticky Fingers, Infact level 9) and
Spider magazine (Carus Publishing) 2013.
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How Anansi Got His Stories (OUP 2011) |
I've been developing my writing with several picture book stories - stories with harvest mice, fledgling umbrella birds, frogs, wrens, shrews, foxes and dragons. Oh, and I've been pondering again on whether pigs can really fly...
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Pig flying over Beech Road, Manchester (Anna Violet) |
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Check Anna's
Featured Illustrator Gallery page to see many more examples of her work. Her personal website is at
www.annaviolet.co.ukFollow Anna on her blog
here
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