Children’s book illustrators have such a profound responsibility! Their work can shape a child’s emotional response to the world, and affect our sense of beauty forever. Here are few of the most formative images from my own childhood.
From Robert Louis Stevenson’s “A Child’s Garden of Verses” illustrated by Gyo Fujikawa, this deep blue starry sky is now framed on Sonja’s nursery wall. It entranced me as a child (although I must admit I barely remember the poem) and inspired me to paint piles of night sky paintings as an adult.
I’ve been mesmerized by this image for as long as I can remember. When I was in high school, I purchased a large, oval-shaped ring because of how deeply connected I felt to the woman in this illustration. Mine was not engraved with the name and likeness of Descartes like hers, but it was close enough and I didn’t take it off for years. The book is “Story Number 1,” the first of 3 surealist tales by Eugene Ionesco of little Josette and the bizarre stories she is told by her father.
The rich illustrations by Etienne Delessert are complex in texture, but soft and excitingly strange.
Here’s another fantastic sky, and just an awesome composition by Tibor Gergely from Margaret Wise Brown’s “Seven Little Postmen.” I can physically smell rain when I look at this!
From the same book, an image that made the idea of traveling through a dark night seem incredibly cozy and atmospheric. I’ve always loved to see the lights of towns and houses through a car window and imagine the lives being lived.
And this illustration by Steffie Lerch from “The Surprise Doll” by Morrell Gipson has given me a life-long delight in putting large groups of stuffed animals or dolls together in carriages, baskets, and cribs. Only now I do it a hundred times a day just to get them off the floor!
I wish I could reply with a photograph! My favorites from childhood (and still to this day):
Madeline: I loved the energy, even the yellow pages!
The Snowy Day by Ezra Jack Keats: Love the collages…
Velveteen Rabbit (ill. by David Jorgensen): Soft, beautiful colored pencil illustrations.
I love all of those too Colleen!! It’s interesting how the drawings in the Madeline books are so loose and kind of rough, and perhaps because of this, so memorable!
Great post!
It’s lovely to see these. When my daughter, now age 15, was little, I opened a box of freebies I’d saved from my early career in a publishing house and found a three volume anthology of the Little Golden Books. How incredible they were! When I was very small, I dimly remember them being sold from a spinner rack in a store maybe like the grocery store. The illustrations by Tibor Gergely, Garth Williams and Eloise .. Eloise.. Johnson?…brought back my early reading so vividly.
My mom has an awesome book called “Golden Legacy” that has biographies of the artists and authors and the stories behind classic Golden books… it’s so fascinating! Did you know that libraries would not have Golden books in them for a long time? Also, I think you’re thinking of Eloise Wilkin. Her drawings of babies and children are so beautiful.
I’m so glad I found your site! Love this post.