INTERVIEW WITH ILLUSTRATOR ROXIE MUNRO
I (Holly Schindler, blog administrator) was delighted to get a chance to chat recently with Roxie Monro, an artist and illustrator for a wide swath of ages. Here, she gives us some insights into her creative process, the business side of art, and even lets us take a peek at her work station:
You’ve
had some amazing accomplishments as an artist—including making the cover of THE
NEW YORKER! Many of us at Smack Dab are familiar with the submission process
for fiction; how is the process different or similar for artwork?
It’s been a long time since I’ve submitted,
but I don’t think the process has changed much, except for the fact that when I
got accepted, there was one art editor…Lee Lorenz. He chose (with the New Yorker’s editor at the time)
cartoons, spots, covers – all the art. Now there are several different editors
for cartoons, spots/illustration, photography, and covers. I began by
submitting spots and was immediately accepted. Contributed them for several
years; I was living in Washington DC at the time and took the train up to New
York City a few times a year. I was so lucky – a couple years later I submitted
two cover paintings, and they bought one right away. I immediately moved to NYC.
I did not know a single person in the city. I soon made friends, though, with
other cartoonists and artists.
In
addition to being an artist, you’re also a writer. What brought you to the
world of children’s books?
I’d been in NYC for a couple years
and was trying to make a living freelancing and doing fine art. I constantly walked
the city, feasting on the city life, the tall buildings, and busy streets. I decided
to try to do adult book jacket covers – maybe city scenes. One day an art
director suggested I see a children’s book editor she knew. I snippily said, “I
don’t do cute; I don’t do bunnies and bears,” but, needing the work, I made the
appointment with Donna Brooks at Dodd Mead (later Dutton Children’s Books). She
said, “I think you have something to offer children. Call me if you get an
idea.” One week later, waking up at 7AM, before my closed eyes I saw, in red capital
letters against the black of sleep, “The Inside-Outside Book of New York City.”
I called her up and said I had a title, but no idea if it was a book. I knew
nothing about page turn, what the gutter was, how many pages are in a standard
book, trim size – nothing. Regarding writing, I had qualified for Honors
English in college and written a couple newspaper articles, but that was it. But
I did the book, and it went on to win the NY
Times Best Illustrated Children’s Book Award and was on Time magazine’s Best of the Year List. So,
I figured I’d stick with doing kid’s books. ;-))
What’s
your process as a children’s illustrator? What comes first—the story, which you
then illustrate, or do you complete several illustrative pieces and then tie
them together with a narrative thread?
The latter, more or less. I’m a “visual
thinker.” After I get an idea or a concept, I’ll do a few sketches, and then a
simple storyboard and dummy. That’s what I present with the proposal to my
editor, not the actual picture book manuscript. Then I do research, refine the
sketches, and do the art. I do not write the text until the art is completely
done. Kind of the reverse of the way most editors prefer.
What
are your favorite illustration tools? (Do you rely primarily on traditional
media? Have any favorite brushes, pencils, etc.? If digital, what are your
favorite programs, drawing tablets, etc.?)
I
don’t do digital art. I think there are basically two kinds of illustrators.
Some, like my buddy Paul Zelinsky, may use a completely different media with
each book – sometimes oil in a classical painting style, or maybe a cartoon-y method,
with pastels or colored pencils, or sometimes he goes digital. I am the
opposite. I use one favorite type of paper, colored inks, one familiar line
thickness with my trusty Radiograph. I want to know my media thoroughly, so
that my brain power doesn’t go into trying to figure out new materials. To
paraphrase Flaubert: “… be regular and orderly in life, so that you may be
violent and original in your work.” I save experimentation not for different
media, but for the idea, the compositions, color, pattern. The Horn Book said of my latest book Masterpiece Mix: “Like so many of Munro’s books,
this one is hard to categorize.” I liked that.
Any
pictures you can show us of an illustration in various stages of completion?
Here’s some work from my drawing
table making Masterpiece Mix.
What’s
one piece of advice you’d give anyone looking to make a living as an artist or
illustrator?
Develop your own style (which
evolves over time) and don’t worry about what’s trendy….to thine own self be
true.
What
can we look forward to next?
I have a book coming out in February
called Rodent Rascals. The device is
that all the rodents are shown actual size, which can get tricky because some
critters, like the capybara, grow the size of a really large dog, so its whole
body can’t fit on a page. Am waiting confirmation on another idea - a
paper-engineered book. Like many of my books, this one is interactive and has
an element of “gamification.” It’s a lot of work – I’ve done four moveable
books, and did the engineering myself, which is hard and a real learning curve.
But it’s fun!
~
Thank you, Roxie, for taking the time to talk with us! And please be sure to continue to keep up with Roxie online:
WEBSITE: www.roxiemunro.com
TWITTER: https://twitter.com/roxiemunro
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/RoxieMunroStudio
Thank you, Roxie, for taking the time to talk with us! And please be sure to continue to keep up with Roxie online:
WEBSITE: www.roxiemunro.com
TWITTER: https://twitter.com/roxiemunro
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/RoxieMunroStudio
KidLitTV: http://kidlit.tv/
KIWiSTORYBOOKS: http://www.kiwistorybooks.com/
PUBLISHERS MARKETPLACE PAGE:publishersmarketplace.com/members/roxiemunro/
BLOG: http://roxiemunro.wordpress.com/
SCHOOL TUBE CHANNEL: schooltube.com/channel/roxie_munro_author/
AMAZON PAGE: amazon.com/author/roxiemunro
INKTHINKTANK: http://inkthinktank.com/
PINTEREST: https://www.pinterest.com/roxiemunro/
App & Trailer Developer OCG STUDIOS:http://www.ocgstudios.com/
KIWiSTORYBOOKS: http://www.kiwistorybooks.com/
PUBLISHERS MARKETPLACE PAGE:publishersmarketplace.com/members/roxiemunro/
BLOG: http://roxiemunro.wordpress.com/
SCHOOL TUBE CHANNEL: schooltube.com/channel/roxie_munro_author/
AMAZON PAGE: amazon.com/author/roxiemunro
INKTHINKTANK: http://inkthinktank.com/
PINTEREST: https://www.pinterest.com/roxiemunro/
App & Trailer Developer OCG STUDIOS:http://www.ocgstudios.com/
Interesting that you do all the illustrations before the text!
ReplyDeleteYep. It helps organize the flow and construction of the book. Then, to write to the images comes easier. All the research gets done before the images though....
DeleteRoxie is amazing. Thank you for this interview, Holly!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Bobbi! It was fun, though it is kind of hard to tell what I was doing with my messy photos. Though you can certainly see what my drawing table is like!
ReplyDeleteAlways love hearing about an illustrators process.
ReplyDeleteWe all work differently, Darlene, though we have so much in common. This was using some collage, which I have never done before. ;-)))
DeleteThanks, Holly and Roxie. Always interesting to get a glimpse inside someone else's creative process!
ReplyDeleteWe all create in different ways! Right, Chris? Whatever works...
ReplyDelete