Martin Brown (artist)

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Martin Brown (born 1 November 1959) is an Australian cartoonist/illustrator. According to Scholastic[1] and The Telegraph,[2] he is best known for being the main illustrator of the Horrible Histories books.

Life

Early life

Brown was born and raised in Melbourne. He started to draw when he was very young, and sought inspiration from from on-screen animated characters like Bugs Bunny. After school, Brown attended an art college, but left the course and instead entered the workforce, working in a television studio for a couple of years. He then became a backpacker and travelled around the world. He wound up in Britain, and decided to stay and work there.[1]

Career

Brown wanted to earn a living via his drawing passion, and eventually built up a catalogue of work including cartoons, magazines, books and greeting cards. He got a job working on the Coping With book Coping With Parents, by Peter Corey.[1] He worked on that series and continued on to another Scholatic project, Horrible Histories.

In 2011, Brown gave a masterclass in art at The Telegraph Bath Festival Of Children's Literature.[2]

Recently, Brown "illustrated Philip Pullman’s New Cut Gang reissue for David Fickling Books".[3]

His agent is Caroline Walsh.[3]

Personal life

Martin lives with his wife and children in the countryside in Shapwick, Dorset, England.[1]

Process

Regardless of what type of illustration is required, Brown's first step is to read the accompanying text. With Horrible Histories colleague Terry Deary, his task is was as a cartoonist to inject humour into the books, so he then bounced ideas back and forth, "either coming up with gags to suit the text or interpreting Terry's instructions for best comic or dramatic effect". The third stage is working out how "angles, scale, aspect, style, pace etc" will be considered in the design space. After that he draws the roughs and finally the finished drawing. The roughs are first sent to the publishers who make their comments, and then they are sent to Deary. Tweaks are done in the rough stage. In the case of full colours books, the last stage is adding colour; either he does it via ink and water-colour, or "the line-work is scanned and sent to a colourist who adds the colour on computer".[4]

References

External links


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