I'm so excited to have Author/Illustrator, Tina Kügler visit KidLit Artists today!
Tina is the illustrator of THE CHANGE YOUR NAME STORE by Leanne Shirtliffe, NO MORE BEIGE FOOD, also by Leanne Shirtliffe, the co-author/illustrator of IN MARY'S GARDEN, and the author/illustrator of her most recent book, SNAIL & WORM: THREE STORIES ABOUT TWO FRIENDS.
I've been a huge fan of Tina's work for many years and I loved learning more about her books and her process. I hope you will, too!
Please tell us a little about SNAIL & WORM.
One of the reviews described it as "cheerfully
screwy," which is the best description I could come up with. It is three
stories about two characters, Snail and Worm.
My youngest was really struggling when he was learning how
to read. I was trying to find something for him that was simple enough but also
funny, where there was the payoff of a gag or joke that he would get as he was
slogging along through the words. I
couldn't find what I was looking for, so I wrote it!
There's a part in the last story, where Snail has a misunderstanding, and the animal that is pictured is not the one described in the words. For kids just starting to read on their own, they all get the joke, it's a reward for working their way through the story.
I chose these characters because most kids can find them
outside. They have limitations, for example, snails are slow, so it helps set
up the gags. Of course the snail is
racing against a rock, or a stick, it's the only time he can win a race.
What was your process like for SNAIL & WORM? As an
author/illustrator did
the story idea start visually or with the text?
I always think visually, the words come after. It's like,
I'm a storyteller, not a writer. From working in storyboards for animation, it
actually comes to me as scenes from a film before anything else. SNAIL &
WORM's text came out as all dialogue. It's like a puppet show, the way it is
staged, it's flat.
For your book, IN MARY’S GARDEN, you collaborated with
your husband,
Carson Kugler. What was the collaboration process like? How
did you arrive
at the finished images?
Yes, and we are still speaking. ;)
We both come from a background in animation storyboarding,
so it helped us tremendously in collaborating. In animation, artists work in
teams, no one person takes ownership of a cartoon-- it is passed back and forth
and everyone does the thing they do best. So we treated it like that, we
bounced thumbnails back & forth until we agreed. Then we did roughs, and
each of us would do a pass, again & again until we agreed.
Mary Nohl used found objects, and essentially other people's
garbage, in her artwork-- so I scanned found papers like old receipts, vintage
postcards, old dictionary pages, and coffee-stained paper to use in our
collaged illustrations.
Carson would trace our roughs onto watercolor paper and
paint the main elements with watercolors. I prefer to draw and paint on my
tablet, so I scanned in his paintings, and layered them with the found papers
and my own digital paint.
For the final step, I drew on top of everything with a lot
of hatching and shading.
We created something together that neither of us could have
created individually. The difficult part was retaining Mary Nohl's personal style
and design motifs as well as our own styles.
What were your favorite books as a kid?
WHAT DO PEOPLE DO ALL DAY? by Richard Scarry.
A GREAT BIG UGLY MAN CAME UP AND TIED HIS HORSE TO ME by
Wallace Tripp. He is my all-time favorite illustrator, just masterful. He also
did SIR TOBY JINGLE'S BEASTLY JOURNEY.
I would get lost in ANNO'S JOURNEY by Mitsumasa Anno, I
spent hours staring at the spreads. It inspired the background hatching in both
IN MARY'S GARDEN and SNAIL & WORM.
I also really loved the illustrations of Nancy Ekholm Burkert, she won a Caldecott Honor in 1973 for illustrating SNOW WHITE, it's still in print in paperback. I would highly recommend tracking down a copy of her version of THE NIGHTINGALE, it's out of print but tooootally worth finding. Beautiful and frightening.
I also really loved the illustrations of Nancy Ekholm Burkert, she won a Caldecott Honor in 1973 for illustrating SNOW WHITE, it's still in print in paperback. I would highly recommend tracking down a copy of her version of THE NIGHTINGALE, it's out of print but tooootally worth finding. Beautiful and frightening.
Can you tell us a little about what you’re working on now
or about any
upcoming projects?
I just submitted the final art for SNAIL & WORM AGAIN. I
am super excited because it is really funny, maybe even better than the first
one. And a little sad. But then funny again.
Carson and I are working on another picture book biography
together that we are almost ready to pitch. It is very visual so we need to
have a sketch dummy together.
I am also working on an early chapter book idea I have
brewing.
Where can we find you online?
My online portfolio is at tinakuglerstudio.com. I am
occasionally on Twitter at @tinatheatre, more frequently when I am
procrastinating.
Thank you, Brooke!!!
Thank you for visiting, Tina!
You can also hear more from Tina and her husband, Carson, on their Let's Get Busy Podcast interview with Matthew Winner of All the Wonders.
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