Korky Paul
Korky Paul is a British illustrator of children's books. He was born and raised in Rhodesia but now lives in Oxford, England. His work, characteristically executed with bright watercolour paint and pen and ink, is recognisable by an anarchic yet detailed style and for its "wild characterisation". He is most known for his illustration of the series Winnie the Witch.
Biography
Paul was born in 1951 into a family of seven children in Salisbury, Southern Rhodesia where he had what he calls "a wild and privileged childhood" in the African Bushveld.He went to Estcourt High School before graduating from Durban School of Art in 1972 and working at an advertising agency in Cape Town. In 1976 he travelled to Greece where he met James Watt, then working for a Greek publisher who commissioned Paul to illustrate a series of educational books teaching Greek children to speak the 'Queen's English'.
He then spent some time working in an advertising agency in London and Los Angeles, and then studied film animation under Jules Engel at California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, California. His first children's book was a pop-up called The Crocodile and the Dumper Truck published in 1980, with paper engineering by Ray Marshall.
In 1986 Paul met the editor, Ron Heapy, at Oxford University Press, who looked at his work and commissioned him to draw several pictures for a short book about a witch written by Valerie Thomas as part of OUP’s Reading Tree programme. Paul liked the story enough to turn it into a complete picture book. Although this was not strictly within Paul's brief, Heapy nevertheless presented it to the OUP delegates. The resulting book, Winnie the Witch, went on to win the Red House Children's Book Award in 1988 and has since been published in over 10 languages. Paul's illustrations for this are full of visual jokes and witty detail. Since then he has illustrated a further nineteen Winnie the Witch titles that have sold over 7 million copies.
Of Paul's contribution to the success of Winnie and Wilbur, Helen Mortimer of OUP writes, "Winnie is such a loved character. It's partly because the artwork is so distinctive and detailed; there is so much to pour over in every single spread." Of his illustration of Winnie in the books, Paul told the Telegraph: "I didn't want witchy colours... I love throwing in colour, it makes me feel like Jackson Pollock."
Three of Paul's picture books have been adapted for CD-ROM; The Fish Who Could Wish which won the European Multi-Media Award in 1995, Dragon Poems and Winnie the Witch.
His anarchic yet detailed work, executed with bright watercolour paint and pen and ink, is distinguished by its "wild characterisation". It has been compared to Tom and Jerry cartoons, and also to the artists Ronald Searle and Ralph Steadman.
He has original artwork on display at The Mazza Collection Galleria, University of Findlay, Findlay, Ohio, USA.
Paul lives in Oxford, Britain and is married to the artist Susan Moxley. Together they have two children, Oska and Zoë.
Describing the technical details of his work he says: "I use an Apple Mac, Schminke watercolours, Caran d’Ache pencil crayons, Saunders Waterford paper 190gm3 , black kandahar and coloured inks with a dip pen, toothbrush, porcupine quills, and my trusty left hand."
In 2015/2016, he was the 7th most borrowed illustrator in UK public libraries.
Partial bibliography
Written and Illustrated
- The Big Book 1985
- The Fat Book 1985
- The Thin Book 1985
- The Coconut Feast, Orbis, 1985.
- Adventures with the Creep, Orbis, 1985.
- The Special Romance, Orbis, 1985.
- The Fruit Salad Tangle, Orbis, 1985.
- Billy Bumps Builds a Palace 1995
Illustrated
Winnie the Witch
- Valerie Thomas, Winnie the Witch 1987, winner of the Children's Book Award
- Valerie Thomas, Winnie in Winter 1996, shortlisted for the Children's Book Award
- Valerie Thomas, Winnie Flies Again 1999
- Valerie Thomas, Winnie's Magic Wand 2002
- Valerie Thomas, Winnie's New Computer 2003
- 2005 Winnie at the Seaside
- 2006 Winnie's Midnight Dragon
- Valerie Thomas, Happy Birthday Winnie 2008
- 2008 Winnie's Flying Carpet
- 2009 Winnie's Amazing Pumpkin
- 2010 Winnie in Space
- 2011 Winnie Under the Sea
- 2012 Winnie's Dinosaur Day
- 2013 Winnie`s Pirate Adventure
- 2014 Winnie`s Big Bad Robot
- 2015 Winnie's Haunted House
- Valerie Thomas, Winnie and Wilbur in Space 2016
- 2016 Winnie & Wilbur Meet Santa
- 2017 Winnie & Wilbur and the Naughty Knight
Others
- Ray Marshall, Sara Sharpe, The Crocodile and the Dumper Truck: A Reptilian Guide to London 1982
- Ray Marshall, Cats Up: Purring Pop-Ups 1982
- Ray Marshall, Doors 1982
- Ray Marshall, Hey Diddle Diddle 1983
- Ray Marshall, Humpty Dumpty 1983
- Ray Marshall, Jack and Jill 1983
- Ray Marshall, Sing a Song of Sixpence 1983
- John Bush, This Is a Book about Baboons 1983
- John Bush, This Is a Book about Giraffes 1983
- John Bush, This Is a Book about Hippos 1983
- Ray Marshall, Pop-Up Numbers 1984
- Ray Marshall, Pop-Up Addition 1984
- Ray Marshall, Pop-Up Subtraction 1984
- Ray Marshall, Pop-Up Multiplication 1984
- Ray Marshall, Pop-Up Division 1984
- Keren Kristal, The Brainbox, 1986
- Peter Carter, Captain Teachum's Buried Treasure 1989, shortlisted for the Kate Greenaway Medal
- Tessa Dahl, Gwenda and the Animals 1989
- Tandi Jackson, The Wonderhair Restorer 1990
- John Foster, Never Say Boo to a Ghost 1990
- Tessa Dahl, School Can Wait 1990
- Stephen Wyllie, Dinner with Fox 1990
- John Bush, The Fish Who Could Wish, 1991
- The Pop-Up Book of Ghost Tales 1991
- John Foster, Dragon Poems 1991
- Robin Tzannes, Professor Puffendorf's Secret Potions, 1992
- Jonathan Long, The Dog That Dug, 1992, shortlisted for the Kate Greenaway Medal
- Shen Roddie, Mrs. Wolf 1992
- Robin Tzannes, The Great Robbery 1993
- Robin Tzannes, Sanji and the Baker, 1993
- John Foster, compiler, Dinosaur Poems 1993
- Robin Tzannes, Mookie Goes Fishing 1994
- Jonathan Long, The Cat That Scratched 1994
- Jeanne Willis, The Rascally Cake, , 1994, winner of the Children's Book Award
- Peter Tabern, Pirates, 1994
- Peter Tabern, Blood and Thunder 1994
- Peter Harris, Have You Seen Max? 1994
- Michel Piquemal, The Monster Book of Horrible Horrors, translated by Peter Haswell, 1995
- John Foster, compiler, Monster Poems 1995
- Jonathan Long, The Duck That Had No Luck 1996, shortlisted for the Kate Greenaway Medal
- Julianna Bethlen, Dracula Junior and the Fake Fangs, paper engineering by Richard Ferguson 1996
- John Foster, compiler, Magic Poems 1997
- Vivian French, reteller, Aesop's Funky Fables 1997
- John Foster, compiler, Dragons, Dinosaurs, and Monster Poems 1998
- John Agard, Brer Rabbit: The Great Tug-o-War, 1998
- Teresa Lynch, Call Me Sam, 1998.
- W. J. Corbett, The Battle of Chinnbrook Wood, 1998
- Jonathan Long, The Wonkey Donkey 1999
- Michael Rosen, Lunch Boxes Don't Fly, 1999
- John Foster, compiler, Pet Poems 2000
- Vivian French, reteller, Funky Tales 2000
- Michael Rosen, Uncle Billy Being Silly 2001
- John Foster, compiler, Fantastic Football Poems 2001
- Michael Rosen, No Breathing in Class 2002
- Paul Rogers, Tiny 2002
- Mary Arrigan, Pa Jinglebob: The Fastest Knitter in the West 2002
- Jon Blake, The Deadly Secret of Dorothy W. 2003
- Giles Andreae, Sir Scallywag and the Golden Underpants 2012
- Freeing the Spirit through Meditation and Yoga by Sandy Chubb and Sister Elaine MacInnes, 2005
- Yoga Without Words by Sandy Chubb and Jo Child, 2008
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