|
Raymond Briggs went to Rutlish
School in Surrey. He left when he was 15 because he wanted to be a
cartoonist. He had originally wanted to be a journalist. He went to
Wimbledon Art School College where he discovered that fine art was
'good' and commercial art was 'bad'. He later went to the Slade
School to train as a painter and quickly realised that he was a
much better illustrator.
Raymond started by illustrating other people's books
and stories, including a Mother Goose Treasury and a collection of
fairytales. He then began to do his own picture books.
Raymond likes making use of a strip cartoon style that
is fun for children and adults to read. His books are almost always
different from other people's: in Father Christmas, he made the old
man grumpy and 'ordinary'; in The Snowman he produced a picture
book without words that was very unusual at the time. He is also a
serious social commentator, as demonstrated in his anti-nuclear
book When the Wind Blows, and in his attack on the Falklands War in
The Iron Lady and the Tin Pot General.
|
|