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| Maurice Sendak Tribute illustration |
Only recently
did I discover the brilliance of Maurice Sendak.
I was
familiar with ‘Where the Wild things Are’ and can remember as a younger child
seeing those fantastical monsters, and of Max in his wolf suit. But now that
have I delved into his other works, and much to my delight, many books on the
man himself – I have come to find a creator that I very much admire. And now often
look to, for words of wisdom, wit, and wonder, as a child might.
What is it
that I find most magical about Mr. Sendak’s creativity?
Word
play
There is a rhythm of words, that as you read, are fun to speak. To hear also. They
sound magical. Maurice had this gift. Here’s one example, from ‘In the Night
Kitchen’.
‘Where the bakers who bake till the dawn so we
can have cake in the morn mixed Mickey in batter, chanting: Milk in the batter!
Milk in the batter! Stir it! Scrape it! Make it! Bake it!
And they put that batter up to bake a delicious Mickey-Cake’.
It just has
such a great lively tempo. And you also understand what is happening. No easy feat,
I am sure.
Ok, another example, from of course ‘Where the Wild things are’.
‘But the wild things cried, “Oh please don’t go
– we’ll eat you up – we love you so!”
And Max said, “No!”
The wild things roared their terrible roars and gnashed their terrible teeth
and rolled their terrible eyes and showed their terrible claws
but Max stepped into his private boat and waved good-bye’.
Playful
illustration
The tempo
of text also resonates with his pictures. On the one hand, the pictures are fully
grounded, in a world we could grasp. A kitchen, a bedroom, at your aunties
house. Yet the characters lived vivaciously through their actions, and
imaginings too. Fully - animated.
Like Mickey, flying high in a plane made of dough for ‘In the Night Kitchen’.
Max, and his rumpus of wild things baying at the moon and swinging through
trees.
The child in me just loves these illustrations, teased to see what next will
happen. So full of wonder. Maybe a little scary too.
And this is why I think the text and images of Maurice Sendak’s picture
books work so well. The movement, both in text and illustration, melded
together, yet working independently to create this culminative delight, a
wonderous story. Worth re-reading, many-many times over.
So, in closing, my humble offering, to a great man, now gone.
Thank you,
Maurice Sendak, for your boundless pursuit and deliverance, of stories so
wonderfully made. Timeless. Universal. For the children in all of us. To ponder
fourth with curiosity and an insatiable delight, for life.
Maurice Sendak, Age 83, 8th May 2012
The above illustration I created in Sketchbook (desktop version), then rendered with the additional text in Adobe Photoshop.
I will post up again soon some conceptual sketches in preparation for my tribute to Mr Sendak, soon.
As always, thanks for visiting. Have a great day/night, wherever you are..."and now", cried Max, "Let the wild rumpus start".