Inspired

Tove Jansson - Mark-making and Tonal Values

I recently started studying on the MA in Children’s Book Illustration at Cambridge School of Art, and we are currently looking at tone and framing.

Tone

We have been studying tonal values within images, and I wanted to share these illustrations by Tove Jansson that show her approaches to using tonal values in her work.

Tove Jansson, via https://www.creativeboom.com/inspiration/tove-jansson/

Tove Jansson, via https://www.dailyartmagazine.com/tove-jansson-moomin-world/

It’s fascinating to see these two illustration versions made with different types of media. I wonder if the painting on the left was a preparatory study to plan her tonal range for the drawing on the right? I can’t find any information about it, so that’s just my guess.

I’m so intrigued by Tove’s use of mark-making to depict tone, with the light areas and negative space untouched to show the original off-white of the paper, some black areas to contrast and show depth, and then variations of mid-tones drawn as ink dashes, creating a range of values depending on the space between them. Somehow she manages to make the dashes flow effortlessly, whilst describing the solidity and forms of the underwater realm. I’ve never been much of a planner when it comes to illustration, I tend to go straight in to the final piece, but am learning to use more considered approaches to create a more dynamic image. A lot more thought goes into these illustrations than I realised!

Quote By Maurice Sendak to inspire us into the new year

Mail art by Maurice Sendak. Credit: Letters of Note

Mail art by Maurice Sendak. Credit: Letters of Note

I remember first reading this quote by Where The Wild Things Are writer/illustrator Maurice Sendak somewhere years ago and it truly warmed me up from the inside. I’m sharing it today to spread some warmth around during this cold, bleak January.

Then I shall stick a copy of it above my desk and return to read it often.

Or perhaps I will eat it?