Brian
Wildsmith (1930-2016) was an acclaimed, award-winning painter and
illustrator. He studied at the Slade
School of Fine Art. In 1962 he won the
Kate Greenaway Medal for Illustration for Brian Wildsmith’s ABC. In 2023, Oxford University Press, published Paws,
Claws, Tails and Roars, a stunning gift book highlighting the breadth of Wildsmith’s
art and introduced by former Children’s Laureate, Michael Rosen.
A new major exhibition, The
World of Brian Wildsmith, is opening in Barnsley Museums and will run
from 20 April to 21 September 2024.
In this interview, we spoke with Simon Wildsmith about his father’s work and Clare
and Rebecca provided us with insights into their favourites of their father’s books.
What do you remember about your dad’s technique,
and how he produced his art?
Brian’s art supplies:
- ·
Handmade paper that always had a
texture to it.
- ·
Windsor and Newton gouache
paints for the bulk of the painting in the illustrations.
- ·
Old plates and jam jars for
water and to mix his colours on.
- ·
Holbein oil pastels, to create
marks and emphasise texture.
- ·
Indian ink.
- ·
Coloured pencils & crayons
Brian sometimes applied very thick, hardly diluted
white gouache paint to the paper to create texture, to which he would then
apply colour once it was completely dry. Sometimes he would add sand to liquid
paper glue to create different textures before adding his colours. He might
then use the flat edge of a razor blade to gently scrape off some of that
coloured gouache, before adding more, or use kitchen roll to dapple or his
fingers to smear. He worked very freely, often saying “there are no rules” and
so he would engage in whatever it took to achieve the effect he was after. All
these techniques would allow the incredible variety in depth of colour and tone
in say, the texture of an animal’s skin or fur, the delicacy of a bird’s
feathers, the subtle consistency of foliage, the character of landscape or just
the wow factor of his graphics.
He also enjoyed using collage, painting different
colours and patterns on other pieces of paper. When dry he would cut out the
shapes he wanted and stick them onto the main illustration when all the base
paint was dry.
He used the very best quality sable paintbrushes in
a number of different sizes, depending on what he was painting. He would keep
them for years, changing their purpose as they wore down and aged.
Brian would draw the main lines of his
illustrations with B, 2B or 4B soft pencils, before applying his paints. Other
times he just painted the illustration or part of the illustration straight on
to the paper.
He always bought the very best quality paint
brushes and paints, often in nearby Italy, just 50 miles away. It was one
of his great twice-yearly pleasures, to get away alone to San Remo, where he
was a valued customer, not only to a great old-fashioned arts supplier, but
also to a restaurant that according to him, served the best Fettuccine with
cream and Parmesan sauce he had ever tasted. Brian adored his food ! We were
never sure exactly what came first. Had he really run out of ‘Tyrien Rose’ or
did he just have to give in to the ‘Call of the Cream ?’
Brian was obviously very influenced by the natural
world – was he a keen naturalist himself, do you have a sense of where this
interest arose from?
Brian was hugely inspired by the natural world. He
wanted to inform his audience about the world around them, and as such studied
it in immense detail. If he could paint an animal with all the colours of the
rainbow and still have you convinced of its veracity, that is in part because
he had studied it so closely, down to its skeletal composition. Thereafter,
nature, the natural world and all that mankind has created of great beauty were
central to his inspiration.
Our parents, and we as a family, travelled a lot and every outing was an excuse
for research - a quick stop at the side of a French country road here, to
photograph a donkey by a beautiful 18th century barn, a coffee break there, in
an Italian piazza to draw its Renaissance church. Observation and research were
central to feeding his art and imagination. Equally, he had a substantial
library of reference books covering all manner of subjects, from his beloved
Renaissance artists to ornithology or Greek architecture…
Furthermore, regarding the myriad animals that populate his books,
they serve as vehicles for communication. Children love animals and have a
natural affinity with them which facilitates story-telling.
In many ways, much of Brian’s work feels more
prescient now than ever, what do you hope new generations of readers will take
from his work?
More prescient indeed! With Professor Noah’s
Spaceship, already back in 1980, Brian was sounding the alarm about pollution
and the degradation of our eco-systems. But he didn’t like to preach. His work
is more suggestive, visually strong, but honouring a child’s natural ability to
understand the essence of quite complex paintings in a way that adults often
fail to do. He once said, ’I paint what I see with my eyes and feel with my
heart.’ From the tiniest of little insects feasting on flowers, to the
mightiest of mammals, his art is filled with the joy of all that is best about
our world – a world that is rapidly changing but with children that are
fundamentally the same as they ever were.
Brian was not concerned with passing trends in art & design, nor in making
books about passing societal trends or preoccupations. His number one battle
was to inspire kids to believe in the ‘possible’ and to help give them what he
called ‘visual literacy,’ as this would reap rewards later in life. He was
preoccupied with universal themes that have been the concern of humanity for
centuries.
These themes around such things as compassion,
kindness, generosity, sharing and the preservation of our planet have indeed
become more urgent to assimilate as time goes by.
In the introduction to ‘Paws, Claws, Tails and
Roars,’ Michael Rosen talks about Klimt and Kokoshka do you have a sense
of the artists and illustrators who inspired Brian’s approach?
Brian’s first love was for the art of the early
Italian Renaissance, before the more academic preoccupations of perspective
interfered with that wildly imaginative creativity of artists like Giotto,
Duccio, Cimabue… It was in part this connection with, and visits to the
fabulous church of Saint Francis in Assisi, that led to his book of the same
name in 1995.
His second love was for the later art and architecture of the Renaissance, with
Raphael, Botticelli, Fra Angelico, Mantegna and Piero della Francesca being
among his favourites. All the greats inspired and elevated him - Caravaggio,
Leonardo, Goya, El Greco… The list is long! Moving on a few centuries to his
own, he also much admired some Picasso, much Giacometti, Henry Moore, Mondrian,
Dubuffet, Modigliani, Egon Schiele, Cézanne, David Hockney…
The afore-mentioned travels we embarked upon usually had destinations like
Florence’s Uffizi, Milan’s Brera, the Scrovegni chapel in Padua and a multitude
of other churches, cathedrals and museums dotted all over southern Europe.
Brian was insatiable in his appetite for discovering as much art and
architecture as possible and he wanted his children to be exposed to as many
‘miracles’ of creation as possible in a way that had not been possible in his
own youth. We were very fortunate indeed.
Can you tell us about some of the process of
bringing, ‘Paws, Claws, Tails and Roars’ to fruition?
Paws, Claws, Tails & Roars came about from an idea of Rebecca’s after Brian
died in 2016. As an homage to his work and his dedication to OUP, she thought
it would be a lovely thing to publish a gift-book with illustrations from his
1960’s trilogy, Birds, Fishes & Wild Animals. Seduced by the idea,
and after much discussion about format, design and content, all the
illustrations were then digitally remastered by Simon, a task he had previously
undertaken to revitalise a number of other titles such as the ABC, Hunter
and his Dog, Professor Noah’s Spaceship, The Bible Stories.
Debbie Sims was commissioned to write the lovely new text.
Michael Rosen would have been approached by OUP,
knowing that he was a fan of Brian’s work. We were thrilled and delighted that
he accepted to write such an insightful and interesting forward.
Brian won the Kate Greenaway Medal for illustration
in 1962 for Brian Wildsmith’s ABC – what did this mean to him?
Winning Britain’s most prestigious children’s books
award for his very first book must have been a tremendously exciting thing
indeed. What a start for an original creator! I say ‘must have been’ because
Clare and Rebecca were very young when this happened and Simon and Anna weren’t
yet born. I remember reading how he didn’t set out to do something
revolutionary. He just wasn’t bound by convention or aware of the constraints.
He just painted his subjects the way he wished, which takes us back to his painting
with his heart. How clearly that shines in those remarkable illustrations!
Thereafter, in later years, he never mentioned it. He had a healthy ego and
assurance about his worth mixed with the modesty one meets in the truly great.
Can you tell us about the forthcoming exhibition at
Barnsley and what people can expect to see and experience?
The forthcoming Barnsley exhibition means the world
to us. We are immensely proud of the whole project that has taken over 2 years
to plan and work out. When we talked amongst ourselves about finding a venue to
show all this amazing art and illustration of our father’s that had never
before been seen by the public, Barnsley just seemed the obvious choice. Aged
19, Brian had escaped a grey, sooty, polluted and poor environment where the
exploitation of miners, including his own father, was rife, to emerge, 13 years
later, on the international children’s books scene in a rainbow explosion of
colour. Barnsley and south Yorkshire have changed beyond all recognition since
then and the time is right to take that rainbow back!
Do you have a favourite book by your dad, if so
what is this and why?
Rebecca - The Owl and the Woodpecker, 1971.
I can distinctly remember as a young child,
watching my father paint so many of the illustrations in this book. I seemed to
relate to both of these birds. A very constructive woodpecker, who tapped away
at his tree every day, not caring at all that the noise he made was badly
affecting the nocturnal owl, who turned up to live in the neighbouring tree and
who needed to sleep all day.
As a young child watching the illustrations evolve,
I very often felt like both of them. I was always building things and I was a
huge sleeper, falling asleep wherever and whenever I could!
I was fascinated with wildlife and the vibrant
colours of the woodpecker grabbed my attention, having never seen a real one. I
was also very taken by the woodpecker’s kindness in saving his ‘arch enemy’ at
the end of the story. What culminated in making this book my favourite, was the
fact that when my father gave me a copy of the newly published book, I opened
it, and there on the front-end paper of the copy I still have, I read:
For darling Rebecca, who inspected every drawing
and cleaned my studio - Daddy. Publication Nov 1971.
Then turning the page to the half title page, there
in print I read:
The Owl and the Woodpecker
For Rebecca
What more could an eleven-year-old possibly want!
(The Owl and the Woodpecker was commended by the
Kate Greenaway committee in 1971.)
Simon - Paws, Claws, Tails & Roars,
2023.
Our father dedicated all his first books to his
children, as and when they were born and so the calendar would have it that I
got his trilogy of Fishes, Birds and Wild Animals. Having spent
countless hours last year diving into every last detail of the illustrations,
in order to ready them for this new and important gift-book, I fell in love
with them anew. Each painting is wildly fresh, exciting and still so modern and
made with such unerring conviction. It is quite simply awe inspiring.
Clare - A Child’s Garden of Verses, 1966.
A Child’s Garden of Verses allowed me to escape
into my father’s wildly vivid imagination…take a look, the illustrations are
exactly as Brian wished, “images which children would react to with joy and
wonder.” That’s precisely what they do to me!
A big thank you to Simon, Clare and Rebecca
Wildsmith. Do consider visiting the
exhibition of Brian’s work in Barnsley if you get the chance.