An Illustrated Mural for Petts Wood Library

Art collaborations can be inspired projects, especially when children are involved! Picture Book Illustrator Loretta Schauer worked with young creatives at Petts Wood Library to produce a dynamic new panel for the library walls.





March can be a busy month for children’s authors, and this year amongst all the World Book Day week school visits I became involved in a longer project to create a children’s mural at Petts Wood Library in Bromley. I was introduced to Jenny Hawke, the Librarian who initiated the idea, through my work with CWISL, and the project was developed in partnership with year 5 students from Crofton Junior School, and with funding by North Kent Decorative and Fine Arts Society.

It was the first time I’d planned and lead the creation of a mural like this, so it was a bit of an experiment. After talking extensively to Jenny, it was clear our main objective was to involve the children as much as possible in the process of creating the final artwork. As I wanted to use the children’s ideas directly, I came up with a cunning plan to use a combination of painting, printing and découpage to fix the final image onto a series of wooden boards that would be mounted on to the library wall.


The adventure began with a visit to the school, working with the children to create their own characters to appear in the mural. The children were part of a group who met regularly to read, and we approached the task as if creating characters that could star in a story. We talked about how to use facial expressions and body language, costume and props to make our characters unique. The photo above shows me demonstrating drawing expressions from a live model who volunteered her drama skills. The children were wonderfully enthusiastic and carried on drawing their characters the following week.

First illustrations

I then took the drawings home with me to scan, enlarge and enhance digitally, adding in a few digital textures and illustrating some bits and bobs, before getting the images professionally printed by Atom Gallery in North London. The prints looked amazingly rich and colourful, and the children were super excited to see their artwork blown up ready to be cut out and découpaged onto the mural.

Prints
The next task was to get the children to visit the Library to paint the background. We used acrylic paint and a combination of brushes, sponges, stencils and even some trusty old potato printing to create the scene on two very large wooden boards. We only had an hour to get the entire 4.5 metre long mural painted so it was all hands on deck! Getting all 12 children simultaneously painting was quite a feat of organisation, but they absolutely rose to the challenge and worked really hard to create all the fab textures and free-hand elements like the buildings and flowers.
Painting
The following week, we met up at the library again, this time to get stuck in with the very sticky glue, and decoupage the characters and other printed elements onto the scene.

Gluing
Here are a few details from the mural including some potato-print shrubbery, complete with mini beasts, and a close up of Petts Wood Library.



I wanted to integrate the children’s artwork with my own as much as possible so here I’d drawn a flying saucer and added in one of the children’s robot characters as the pilot.


This bus was populated with the children’s self-portraits drawn on tissue paper so they could be cut out and pasted onto the windows. A coat of decoupage glue over the top ensured the tissue paper became transparent, and sealed the portraits in place.



This building was created by taking a scan of a pencil sketch from the background of one of the children’s pictures, enlarging it massively, and then adding in textures in Photoshop. It was reproduced as a fine art giclee print ready to be cut out and stuck onto the mural.


The final task was to carry the boards outside to be sprayed with acrylic sealant (tricky on a windy day!), and then leave them to dry before they could be mounted on the wall.

I think the result was well worth the hours put in, and the best thing was seeing the children and their proud parents at the grand unveiling, where the mural was officially presented to the community by the Mayor of Bromley. It was a lovely way to help forge closer links within the local community, and to remind people to love their local library!


The project got some great local press coverage, and there will be a permanent display in the library showing photos of the project in progress. Like many authors, school visits have become a big part of what I do and I really enjoy these kinds of projects. It’s been great fun working with the children, their teachers, and the librarians at Petts Wood.

Photos © Laura Russen,  Andrew Rogers, Loretta Schauer

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Loretta illustrates picture books and young fiction titles. Her latest title Dougal Daley - It's NOT My Fault! is published on the 26th April. She blogs at lorettaschauer.tumblr.com and Tweets @Loretta_Schauer

Agent website www.holroydecartey.com
Website: www.lorettaschauer.com

4 comments:

  1. Fantastic project! Kudos to all participants!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Love it! I wish I was an illustrator as well!

    ReplyDelete
  3. It can be important, on the other hand it happens to be critical to help you remaining hair on the internet site an item weblink: zLibrary

    ReplyDelete

We love comments and really appreciate the time it takes to leave one.
Interesting and pithy reactions to a post are brilliant but we also LOVE it when people just say they've read and enjoyed.
We've made it easy to comment by losing the 'are you human?' test, which means we get a lot of spam. Fortunately, Blogger recognises these, so most, if not all, anonymous comments are deleted without reading.

Words & Pictures is the Online Magazine of SCBWI British Isles. Powered by Blogger.