Friday 13 May 2016

Pearl Binder: from the East End to Hong Kong and North America.

Within our collections at Seven Stories, the National Centre for Children's books, we have collections that you might expect to find - Philip Pullman, Diana Wynne Jones, Judith Kerr, David Fickling, Michael Morpurgo - but we also have some unexpected but equally brilliant collections.  Pearl Binder wasn't primarily a children's book illustrator; she was known as a writer, artist and television personality, as well as being a sculptor and stained glass artist with an interest in fashion. She is a fascinating character and we're lucky enough to have material which relates to her role as children's book illustrator.

Binder was born in Salford but moved to London after the first world war to study at the Central School of Art and Design.  She settled in East London in the 1920's and the area features prominently in her work; Pearl illustrated Thomas Burke's The Real East End (Constable, 1932) and was an advocate of the Pearly Kings and Queens.   

Included in her achievements are her Pearly mug for Wedgewood, her work with Amal Gosh and City Literary Institute's stained glass evening class to design and make armorial windows for the house of Lords, and her involvement in the early days television broadcasting (British Museum: bibliographical details). According to Project Gutenberg she may have been the first heavily pregnant woman to appear on television . And, of course, because this is a Children's Literature blog another achievement to celebrate is Binder's Puffin Picture Book Misha Learns English (Puffin, 1942).

Though our collection of her material is small (all of two items!) it is still worth a blog post. The first item is her dummy book for Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten (Dobson books, 1964) written by Binder's daughter Josephine Marquand. 

Dummy book dedication and title page by Pearl Binder for Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten (Dobson books, 1964).  Photograph © Seven Stories The National Centre for Children's Books. 

Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten is the first in a series of collaborations between Binder and Marquand about the little boy Chi Ming who lives on Hong Kong Island.  Interestingly, Binder was an adventurous traveller, with a particular interest in visiting and writing about China (Spitalfields Life). Whilst illustrating Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten Pearl was living with her daughter Josephine Marquand in Hong Kong. 

Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten is a story with many nuances, and a subtly educational feel. In 1964 Hong Kong was under British sovereignty so, Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten  provides an insight into the Chinese culture of a region under British administration.  The book is beautifully detailed and tells the story of  a small boy, Chi Ming, and his family who are fruit sellers. 

Ladder Street was not really a ladder but a flight of grey stone steps running between two rows of crumbling houses on the island of Hong Kong.  At the top of the steps grew a very old Tree of Heaven, which burst into scarlet blossom every summer 
(Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten, dummy book). 

Ladder street is set on a real street in Sheung Wan and the Tree of Heaven has a long history in Chinese culture - for medicine and as a metaphor (a father figure as a fully developed tree and a spoiled child a stump). 


Ladder Street in the typhoon.  Dummy book by Pearl Binder for Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten (Dobson books, 1964).  Photograph © Seven Stories The National Centre for Children's Books. 

Dummy book. by Pearl Binder for Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten (Dobson books, 1964).  Photograph © Seven Stories The National Centre for Children's Books. 

In the story the families of the street are so poor that they sleep under their stalls, and during a typhoon Chi Ming's family suffer the destruction of their canvas awning.  They also experience something that could only be lucky according to Chi Ming's uncle The Great-Uncle Ma.  It is the year of the Tiger and what should fall on Chi Ming's shoulder but a tiger kitten with five stripes? Five being a lucky number in Chinese culture, and associated with the five elements. 

Once the storm is over the family discover that the kitten belongs to the son of a very rich family.  Ma encourages Chi Ming to give the kitten back to the son despite Chi Ming's attachment to the kitten. As a reward for returning the kitten Chi Ming is asked what he would like. Nothing could replace the kitten so he asks for a replacement canvas for his family's stall.  

Though initially jealous of the tiger kitten's attachment to Chi Ming - a kitten that seems to favour the kind by sitting on their shoulder and purring - the young rich boy offers Chi Ming another gift out of kindness.  Perhaps the Tree of Heaven overlooking this story is a metaphor; we have both the guiding and steady figure of wisdom, The Great Uncle Ma, who encourages Chi Ming to do the right thing, and the spoiled child who learns to be kind and giving. 

This second gift is 'an enormous paper lantern in the shape of a white carp, with pink scales and red fins, a scarlet tail and curling yellow whiskers'  which enables Chi Ming to lead the Ladder Street children in the Moon Festival lantern parade. (Pearl Binder's dummy book for Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten)


The Moon Festival double page spread. Dummy book by Pearl Binder for Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten (Dobson books, 1964).  Photograph © Seven Stories The National Centre for Children's Books. 
The moon festival is the second largest festival in the Chinese lunar calendar. The festival celebrates three fundamental concepts: gathering, thanksgiving and praying. These three concepts also guide the plot of Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten. Chi Ming's family and neighbours gather together in the aftermath of the storm, they are thankful for their luck and fortune in finding the kitten which enables them to fix the damage done by the storm and, at the very beginning of the story, Chi Ming visits the Temple to pray to Kuan Yin, the goddess of Mercy, to keep his family safe.  

Details of the Moon Festival; Chi Ming, the Great-Uncle Ma and the carp lantern. Dummy book by Pearl Binder for Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten (Dobson books, 1964).  Photograph © Seven Stories The National Centre for Children's Books. 

As you can see the illustrations in the dummy book are rough but stunning.  If you look closer there is so much texture and detail to her work.  Binder has used a variety of techniques on separate pieces of paper and brings these together as a dummy book.  There has been careful attention to word placement with individual words being cut and pasted into place.  In places the text has also been annotated and ammended.

There are a variety of pen sketches and full colour spreads.  The coloured double page spreads are particularly stunning. They're so vibrant - with washes that sometimes overcome Binder's ink sketches.  These are usually mixed media - strong washes, with ink drawings and details picked out strongly in contrasting pastels (particularly in the typhoon and Moon Festival images above). 

Binder is able to perfectly capture different atmospheres of the story - as you can see in the Temple, the typhoon, the bustling street and parade which are photographed. 

At the Temple. Dummy book by Pearl Binder for Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten (Dobson books, 1964).  Photograph © Seven Stories The National Centre for Children's Books. 




I find the street scenes  particularly interesting because the very lack of detail and the bright, yet limited colour palette, somehow seems to add to a sense of busy-ness.  

Street scene before the storm. Dummy book by Pearl Binder for Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten (Dobson books, 1964).  Photograph © Seven Stories The National Centre for Children's Books. 

Unfortunately we don't have a copy of Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten in our book collection to compare.  In fact the only one of Binder's books we do have is unrelated to her illustration work and shows a completely different side to her career; Pearl Binder as author, with an interest in both culture and fashion.  Illustrator Faith Jaques had a huge reference library for her illustration work, often for historical illustration, and Binder's Muffs and Morals (George G. Harrap & Co, 1958) is one of the many books about historical fashion that Jaques collected.  Binder also illustrated this title with line drawings which are characteristic of her style. 

Pearl Binder's Muffs and Morals (George G. Harrap & Co, 1958) as part of our Faith Jaques book collection © Seven Stories The National Centre for Children's Books.
Back to Pearl Binder as children's illustrator - the second book I want to show you also begins far away from both Binder's life in East London and China. In 1963 she illustrated K. Goell's Pocahontas (Florence printed). 

Front cover of illustration proofs by Pearl Binder for K. Goell's Pocahontas (Florence printed, 1963)   Photograph © Seven Stories The National Centre for Children's Books. 
Back cover of illustration proofs by Pearl Binder for K. Goell's Pocahontas (Florence printed, 1963)   Photograph © Seven Stories The National Centre for Children's Books. 
This is a printed proof for the book's illustration and is wordless.  You don't need the words to interpret Pearl's depiction of Pocahontas. It showcases the same bold colour palette yet seems very different from Chi Ming and the Tiger Kitten.  

Wedding celebration double page spread from illustration proofs by Pearl Binder for K. Goell's Pocahontas (Florence printed, 1963)   Photograph © Seven Stories The National Centre for Children's Books. 

As well as illustrating this version of the story Binder also designed a musical based on the historical figure of Pocahontas for Joan Littlewood at the Theatre Royal Statford East (Tyne and Wear Archives and Museums). 

If you're interested in Pearl Binder Spitalfields Life gives a fantastic in depth account of her work and her attachment to the East End of London. As part of a series of blog posts about 'Everyman prints' Tyne and Wear Archives and Museums explore more of her life and work. Design for Today have also written an interesting blog post which includes the cover image for Puffin Picture Book Misha Learns English. 

If you'd like to find out more about the Seven Stories Collection, then 

email: collections@sevenstories.org.uk or phone: 0191 495 2707 or comment on this blog.


Wednesday 4 May 2016

All About: Boats

Continuing our monthly transport themed blogs, Seven Stories Exhibition Curator David Wright explores the significance of boats in the work of Edward Ardizzone.

Last week, the Collections and Exhibitions team at Seven Stories, National Centre for Children’s Books was working full steam ahead to ensure that our new exhibition was shipshape and ready to open for bank holiday weekend.

The exhibition uses original artwork from the Seven Stories Collection to celebrate the eightieth anniversary of the publication of Little Tim and the Brave Sea Captain, the first picture book by one of Britain’s greatest illustrators, Edward Ardizzone.

Edward Ardizzone: 80 Years of Little Tim exhibition. 

Little Tim is Ardizzone’s most famous character, starring in a series of eleven picture books, published from 1936 – 1977. Originally created as a character to amuse his son Philip, Tim went on to become one of the great heroes of children’s literature, described by Maurice Sendak, creator of Where the Wild Things Are, as:

“A proper, courageous, if somewhat headstrong seven year-old who has an insatiable wanderlust and lives in a house by the sea…”

Seven Stories Collection © Edward Ardizzone Estate

Ships, the sea and adventures on the waves are at the heart of all of the Little Tim books, with many of Ardizzone’s own childhood experiences informing his stories.

As a boy, the young Ardizzone was engrossed by postcards sent from overseas by his parents, who travelled the world working on government service. He was also fascinated by a ship’s logbook written and illustrated by his Great Grandfather, who had captained a ship that sailed from London to Bombay and back in 1846 – 47.

Growing up at the coast in Ipswich, Ardizzone loved to play by the docks with his cousin Arthur, sneaking aboard the ships to explore, sometimes befriending the crew, sometimes being chased away. Later, Ardizzone lived in Deal, Kent, in a house close enough to the sea for the gentle music of the bands playing aboard passing cruise ships to drift through his bedroom window at night. This house, backing onto a long pebbly beach, is immortalised in his books as the home of Little Tim, and his friends Charlotte and Ginger.

Tim, Charlotte and Ginger outside Tim’s house.  Finished artwork from Tim and Charlotte (Oxford University Press 1951) Seven Stories Collection © Edward Ardizzone Estate

Little Tim himself certainly shares his creator’s enthusiasm for all things nautical. When not sipping grog with his friend Captain McFee or practicing his knots on the beach, Tim can be found spotting "Cunarders" through his telescope, making his plans to run away to sea.

Tim gets his wish in Little Tim and the Brave Sea Captain, sailing out with the old boatman, in a small motor boat memorably named Saucy Sue Walmer. Disaster is never far away in the Little Tim series and before long Tim is narrowly avoiding a one way trip to Davy Jones’ Locker.

Despite the danger of this first adventure, Tim is desperate to go to sea again and never struggles in finding work as a cabin boy. Always eager to help, throughout the series Tim can be found scrubbing decks and peeling potatoes, painting ships and delivering the captain’s dinner; even reading Moby Dick to the crew and writing love letters home for the ship’s cook.

Ardizzone used his childhood experiences to bring the lively atmosphere of ships and the camaraderie of their crew to life on the page. When Little Tim and the Brave Sea Captain was first published in New York, Ardizzone decided to make the journey across the Atlantic in a small, slow cargo boat, rather than a comfy cruise ship, as he felt more at home aboard ordinary working ships.

Finished artwork from Tim in Danger (Oxford University Press 1953) Seven Stories Collection © Edward Ardizzone Estate

Never exhausted by his daily chores, Little Tim always leaves time to avert catastrophe and save the day. A truly fearless hero, Tim is permanently on hand to rescue his friends (and the occasional ship’s cat) from the storms and shipwrecks that are par for the course in Ardizzone’s briny tales.

If reading this blog has helped you find your sea legs, why not visit Seven Stories this summer to see some of Ardizzone’s masterful original illustrations for yourself.


Edward Ardizzone: 80 Years of Little Tim is on show at the Seven Stories visitor centre until 18 September 2016.


If you'd like to find out more about the Seven Stories Collection, then 


email: collections@sevenstories.org.uk or phone: 0191 495 2707 or comment on this blog.