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'If students can't learn the way we teach, we must teach the way they learn' (Ignacio Estrada, via Tomlinson)

Freya Blackwood wins Kate Greenaway Medal

Posted by Lisa Hill on August 7, 2010


I am indebted to Rosemary Sorensen from The Australian, for the news that Freya Blackwood has won the 2010 Kate Greenaway Medal.  In a full feature article entitled Picture Perfect, Sorensen profiles the artist and some of the children’s books she has illustrated.

What you can’t see in the online version of this article are the charming illustrations from Harry and Hopper.  This is a lovely book by Margaret Wild, about coming to terms with the loss of a pet.  The watercolours featured in the Sorensen article are scenes of ordinary domestic Aussie life: the kid playing rumbustious games with a lively black-and-white dog in the big backyard, while in the background an androgynous parent is hanging out the washing, rolling up the hose, bringing the groceries from the car.  They are perfect.

By coincidence this week I have been reading Libby Gleeson’s Harry and Millie and the Very Fine House.  It’s on the CBCA shortlist, and for once I have no reservations about the suitability of the books they have chosen.  Freya Blackwood also illustrated this thought-provoking story about a little boy whose parents move from an inner-city Victorian home to a McMansion with vast spaces and an emptiness that intimidates Clancy.  ‘It’s too big’, he whispers’, but his mother is ‘already gone’, vanished into its huge and soulless chambers where she cannot hear him.  The isolation of children within these cavernous houses was never so poignantly depicted! 

What Blackwood also shows with the monstrous pile of packing-boxes that the children play with is the unconscionable consumerism that is associated with these McMansions which proliferate in the outer suburbs but are coming like a creeping cancer to destroy the middle suburbs too.  The train that the children build with the boxes stretches out of the garden and into the street – but the most arresting image is the crazy tower that they build.  It is fractured, destined to fall apart, like the communities isolated in suburbs full of these monoliths.   Clancy calls his packing-box-house ‘a very fine dwelling’ and that’s what Dad calls the new house too: it’s not a home.  With older children reading this book, I explore Dad’s absence from the grand tour of the empty rooms.  Mum is exultant about the huge shiny kitchen, but Dad is nowhere to be seen.

Another book I use a lot in the library is Two Summers by John Heffernan.  This brilliant story of a city kid who visits a friend on a farm ravaged by drought is one of the best books I have for the unit I teach about farming.  Blackwood’s illustrations tell the story of Australia’s cruel droughts with graphic but not gratuitous detail, but the story also shows the indefatigable spirit that characterises outback life. 

The partnership of Margaret Wild and Freya Blackwood is also featured on the 2010 NSW Premier’s Literary Award page about the Patricia Wrightson’s Award for Children’s Literature.

6 Responses to “Freya Blackwood wins Kate Greenaway Medal”

  1. Louise said

    This made big news (well I read one article) in the local paper because she’s from Orange. I actually went to a talk she gave at the local art gallery a couple of months ago. I enjoy her work, and the feel of it. Her grandfather was a painter too. He had an exhibition last year at the local gallery, and it was really interesting to see the similarity in style between the two. I haven’t read all her books, but I really love Roddy Doyle’s Her Mother’s Face. I think it’s one of my favourite picture books ever.

    • Lisa Hill said

      That explains her empathy with the drought-stricken family in Two Summers. Is there somewhere nearby (like Books Illustrated here in Melbourne) where you can buy her pictures if you like them?
      I’ve got a lovely little B&W drawing by Ann James which I bought and I have it in my library here at home. Some of the best artwork you can buy is done for picture book illustration…

      • Louise said

        I agree with your comment about the quality of picture book illustrations. They can be outstanding. You can buy some of her prints from the Books Illustrated website actually.

        • Lisa Hill said

          I didn’t know that *pause* *looks up Books Illustrated online* Do you see the 5th one down, that cute dog? That’s from Reggie Queen of the Street one of my all time favourites, but they haven’t got the link for that one set up yet. I’ll have to keep an eye on that site. Shaun Tan’s are expensive!

      • Louise said

        I’ve not heard of Reggie Queen of the Street, but have just ordered it from my library. I’ll look forward to it and let you know if I love it as much as you do. I’ll have to organise a pilgrimage to Books Illustrated next time I’m in Melbourne. I didn’t realise it was more than an online business. Looks intriguing.

        • Lisa Hill said

          Reggie is *gorgeous*. I don’t have to fake the lump in the throat when I get to the critical moment! I think I identify with it because I moved so much when I was a kid… Lisa

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