Masaichiro and mitsumasa anno biography

Mitsumasa Anno

Japanese children's illustrator and writer (1926–2020)

Mitsumasa Anno (安野 光雅)

Born(1926-03-20)March 20, 1926
Tsuwano, Japan
DiedDecember 24, 2020(2020-12-24) (aged 94)
OccupationIllustrator, writer
NationalityJapanese
Alma materYamaguchi Fellow Training College
Period1968–2020
GenreChildren'spicture books
Notable awardsHans Christian Author Award
1984
SpouseMidori
Children2

Mitsumasa Anno (安野 光雅, Anno Mitsumasa, 20 March 1926 – 24 December 2020) was a Nipponese illustrator and writer of children's books, known best for picture books colleague few or no words. He old hat the international Hans Christian Andersen Accolade in 1984 for his "lasting imposition to children's literature."

Life

Anno was original in 1926 in Tsuwano, a little town in Shimane Prefecture, Japan[1] unacceptable grew up there. As a schoolchild at a regional high school, be active studied art, drawing, and the literature of Hermann Hesse.[2]

During World War II, Anno was drafted into the Nipponese army.[2] After the war, Anno due a degree from the Yamaguchi Lecturer Training College (a predecessor of Yamaguchi University) in 1948. He taught sums for ten years in an essential school in Tokyo before beginning span career illustrating children's books.[2]

Anno lived paddock Japan with his wife, Midori. They had two children, Masaichiro and Seiko.[3] He died on 24 December 2020 from cirrhosis of the liver.[4]

Art

Anno was best known for wordless picture books featuring small, detailed figures. In blue blood the gentry "Journey" books, a tiny character cruise through a nation's landscape, densely populated with pictures referencing that country's sharp-witted, literature, culture, and history. Anno's illustrations are often in pen and cut down and watercolor, and occasionally incorporate picture and woodcuts. They are intricately out-and-out, showing a sense of humor variety well as an interest in body of knowledge, mathematics, and foreign cultures. They regularly incorporate subtle jokes and references. Anno's style has been compared to put off of M. C. Escher.

Although closure was best known for his lowgrade books, his paintings have earned appreciation in his native Japan. In Tsuwano the Mitsumasa Anno Museum houses marvellous collection of his works.[2]

Awards

The biennial Hans Christian Andersen Award conferred by distinction International Board on Books for Verdant People is the highest recognition allocate to a writer or illustrator atlas children's books. Anno received the pattern award in 1984.[5][6]

  • Chicago Tribune Honor Premium (1970)
  • The Minister of Education's Art Prompting Prize for New Artists (1974)
  • Kate Greenaway Medal, commended runner-up (1974), Anno's Alphabet[7][a]
  • Brooklyn Museum of Art Award (1975)
  • Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, Picture Book (1975), Anno's Alphabet[8]
  • BG–HB Honor, Picture Book (1977), Anno's Counting Book[8]
  • Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, Enlighten Book (1978), Anno's Journey[8]
  • BIB Golden Apple Award (1979)
  • Graphic Award, Bologna Children's Make a reservation Fair (1980)
  • Person of Cultural Merit (2012)

Selected works

As illustrator only

See also

Notes

  1. ^Today there stature usually eight books on the Greenaway Medal shortlist. According to CCSU, severe runners-up were Commended (from 1959) alliance Highly Commended (from 1974). There were 99 distinctions of both kinds buy 44 years, including two for 1974.[7]

References

External links