Korky Paul – Children’s Illustrator
Created | Updated Aug 6, 2008
Korky Paul is the children's illustrator behind Winnie the Witch, The Fish Who Could Wish and Dragon Poems among other publications and has original artwork on show at The Mazza Collection Galleria in the University of Findlay in Ohio, USA.
Growing Up In Africa
Born in 1951, in Rhodesia, Zimbabwe1, Hamish Vigne Christie Paul grew up in a family of seven children in the African Bushveldt. From an early age, Paul enjoyed creating cartoons and loved reading comic books. He studied Fine Art at the Durban School of Art in South Africa before joining an advertising agency in Cape Town. At the agency his boss's secretary greeted him with 'Hello, howzit. So you're Korky Paul, the New Drawer?', but Paul doesn't simply see himself as someone who draws as he reflects:
As the drawer, you are not only the cinematographer but also the director, the casting agent, the costume designer, the set designer and responsible for the locations, lighting, props and continuity!
In 1976, he fled apartheid Africa and went to live in Greece. There he met a Scottish man called James Watt who worked for a Greek publisher. That same publisher commissioned Paul to illustrate children's books which aimed to teach Greek children to speak English. He then joined an advertising agency in London and Los Angeles, before embarking upon an animation course at CAL-ARTS in California. His first children’s book was a pop-up book called The Crocodile and The Dumper Truck, which was published in 1980.
Meeting Winnie the Witch
In 1986, Paul met the editor of Oxford University Press, Ron Heapy. He remembers their meeting vividly:
Ron looked at my work, and gave me a manuscript for OUP's Reading Tree programme, at the lower end of the market, asking me to do a couple of drawings for it. It was the first Winnie the Witch, and I thought it such a great story I turned it into a whole picture book.
Although, Heapy was not after a whole book on Winnie the Witch he still showed the OUP delegates Paul's drawings and they accepted them. Eventually, the book became so popular that it won the Children's Book Award in 1987. Paul was particularly honoured by this accolade as it was judged solely by children. He states: So, for me, winning an award judged by children is a particularly rewarding and special experience'.
Family Man
Paul lives in Summertown, Oxford with his wife Susan Moxley and two children Zoe and Oska. Moxley grew up in South Africa like her husband and attended a course on Fine Art in Durban. She did a postgraduate course at Croydon College in the United Kingdom and is well known for her prints, paintings, illustrations and stained glass works. The family spend most of their time in England, but like to take long holidays in Greece too.
Other Books
Paul has illustrated many other books for authors such as John Foster and Robin Tzannes and drawn many more pictures of Winnie the Witch for Valerie Thomas and OUP. The books featuring the wonderful witch have done so well that many of the stories have been translated into over ten languages worldwide.
In 1991, Anne McNeil, editor at the Bodley Head, asked Paul to illustrate Jonathan Long’s book The Dog That Dug. Once released it won The Sheffield Book Award. Paul and Long have created a further three books under the supervision of Anne McNeil.
Helping to Break the Ice
In 2005, Paul was asked by the charity Action for Prisoners' Families (APF) to come up with illustrations for story books. These stories would help children come to terms with a family member going to prison. Lucy Gampell from the charity said: 'Something in the region of a third are not told where their parent is taken - though a lot work it out for themselves'. These books are hoped to help the child feel less isolated and able to take part in discussions that concern their parent.
What he gets up to now
Today, Paul takes pleasure in visiting schools and talking to the children about his love for illustrating the books that they read. He engages the children in what they think would make a great illustration and is inspired both by their suggestions and the drawings they give him.