Deborah Niland

Deborah Niland

Deborah Niland (born 1950) is an Australian artist,[1][2] well known as a writer and illustrator of children's books.[3][4] Some of her most popular books include Annie's Chair, When The Wind Changed, Mulga Bill's Bicycle, and Chatterbox. In 2006 she won The Children's Book of the Year – Early Childhood, with her book, Annie's Chair.[5]

Contents

Biography

Deborah and her twin sister Kilmeny are the youngest of five children of Australian authors D'Arcy Niland and Ruth Park. Deborah was born in Auckland, New Zealand and raised in Sydney, Australia.

Deborah and Kilmeny attended the Julian Ashton Art School in The Rocks, Sydney. Here they studied drawing and painting, taught in the traditional manner, by J Richard Ashton.

Both began their art careers by freelancing. In London, they received illustration work from Transworld (company) and their first full-length picture book The Little Goat was published in 1971. Deborah and Kilmeny worked together on thirteen books. Their best known collaboration is an illustrated version of Mulga Bill's Bicycle, based on a poem written by A B (Banjo) Paterson. This classic picture book was first published in 1973, and has never been out of print. The newest edition is published by HarperCollins Australia.

Deborah's early career as a book illustrator[6] involved collaborations with author Ruth Park (When The Wind Changed (1980), Roger Bandy (1977) and The Gigantic Balloon (1975)) and author Jean Chapman (Velvet Paws and Whiskers (1979) and The Sugar Plum Christmas Book (1977)). Recently, Deborah has both written and illustrated many children's titles including Annie's Chair (2005), The Big Green Thing (2008), and Let's Play (2007). Throughout her career, Deborah has illustrated more than 40 titles.

In addition to book illustration,[7] Deborah has been a freelance contributor to The Australian Women's Weekly for over ten years, providing mainly humorous illustrations for articles and stories. Work for other magazines included Cleo, Family Circle,[8] Choice and Reader's Digest.

When illustrating or painting, Deborah uses a variety of materials,[9] including pen and ink, coloured pencil, acrylic paint, water-colour, pencil and digital media.

Deborah has continued to work in the fine arts, producing paintings for exhibitions and galleries. She has won several prizes, including The Robert le Gay Brereton Prize for Drawing, awarded by the Art Gallery of NSW and the North Sydney Art Prize (Open) 2009. Her work has been acquired by private and public collections.

Published books

As Author and Illustrator

  • It's Bedtime William! (2010)
  • When Coco was a Kitten (2009)
  • Double Trouble (2008)
  • The Big Green Thing (2008)
  • Annie to the Rescue (2007)
  • Let's Play! (2007)
  • When I was a Baby (2006)
  • Annie's Chair (2005)
  • Old MacDonald had an Emu (1986)
  • ABC of Monsters (1975)
  • Birds on a Bough (1975 with Kilmeny Niland)

As Illustrator

  • The Tall Man and the Twelve Babies (2010)
  • Hooray! There's a Hippopotamus on Our Roof Having a Birthday Party (2010)
  • Grandpa Baby (2009)
  • Chatterbox (2006)
  • Guess What? There's A Hippopotamus On The Hospital Roof Eating Cake (1997, 2007)
  • Look, There's A Hippopotamus In The Playground Eating Cake (1994, 2006)
  • Hey Hippopotamus, Do Babies Eat Cake Too? (1992, 2007)
  • James (1991)
  • Families Are Funny (1990)
  • My Hippopotamus Is On Our Caravan Roof Getting Sunburnt (1989, 2006)
  • The Very Sniffy Dog (1989)
  • All Australian Funny and Frightful Verse (1987)
  • The Tall Book Of Tall Tales (1985)
  • Haunts and Taunts (1983)
  • The Jacky Dandy Song Book (1982)
  • Kneedeep (1981)
  • The Zoo Alphabet (1980, with Kilmeny Niland)
  • Fairy Strike (1980)
  • When The Wind Changed (1980)
  • There's a Hippopotamus On Our Roof Eating Cake (1980, 2005)
  • The Drover's Dream (1979)
  • Velvet Paws and Whiskers (1979)
  • Tell Us Tales (1978, with Kilmeny Niland)
  • Miss Strawberry Verses (1978)
  • Roger Bandy (1977, 1987, with Kilmeny Niland)
  • The Sugar Plum Songbook (1977)
  • The Sugar Plum Christmas Book (1977)
  • Tell Me Another Tale (1976, with Kilmeny Niland)
  • Tumbling Jack and Other Rhymes (1976)
  • The Gigantic Balloon. (1975, with Kilmeny Niland)
  • Stuff & Nonsense (1974)
  • What Am I ? (1974, with Kilmeny Niland)
  • Animal Tales (1974)
  • Tell Me A Tale (1974, with Kilmeny Niland)
  • Mulga Bill's Bicycle (1973, 2007, with Kilmeny Niland)
  • The Farm Alphabet (1973, with Kilmeny Niland)
  • Riverview Kids (1971, with Kilmeny Niland)
  • The Little Goat (1971, with Kilmeny Niland)
  • Travelling Songs of Old Australia, (1966 with Kilmeny Niland, uncredited)

Awards

A selection of awards for picture-books

Annie's Chair

(Author and Illustrator Deborah Niland)

  • 2008 Winner KOALA Children's Choice Awards, Picture Storybooks
  • 2008 Short Listed YABBA Children's Choice Awards, Picture Storybooks
  • 2007 Short Listed BILBY Children's Choice Awards, Early Readers
  • 2007 Short Listed YABBA Children's Choice Awards, Picture Storybooks
  • 2007 Winner COOL Children's Choice Awards, Picture Storybooks
  • 2007 Short Listed KOALA Children's Choice Awards. Picture Storybooks
  • 2007 Koala Top 10 KOALA Children's Choice Awards, Picture Storybooks
  • 2006 Winner Speech Pathology Australia, Best Book for Language Development: Young Children
  • 2006 Winner CBCA Book of The Year: Early Childhood

Chatterbox

(Author Margaret Wild, Illustrator Deborah Niland)

  • 2007 Shortlist CBCA Book of The Year: Early Childhood
  • 2007 Honour Book CBCA Book of The Year: Early Childhood
  • 2007 Winner CBCA Junior Judges Project: Early Childhood
  • 2007 Winner YABBA Children's Choice Awards: Picture Storybooks
  • 2007 Winner KOALA Children's Choice Awards: Picture Storybooks

When The Wind Changed

(Author Ruth Park, Illustrator Deborah Niland)

  • 1996 Winner BILBY Award
  • 1986 Winner YABBA Award
  • 1981 Winner NSW Premier's Literary Award, Ethel Turner's Prize,

Mulga Bill's Bicycle

(Author A B Paterson, Illustrators Deborah and Kilmeny Niland)

  • 1976 IBBY Certificate of Honour
  • 1974 Winner Visual Arts Board Award
  • 1973 Winner ABPA Book Design Award

External links

References

  1. ^ Who's Who of Australian Women, Crown, 2008, 2009
  2. ^ Artists and Galleries of Australia, Max Germaine, Lansdowne edition, 1979 onwards
  3. ^ Artists of the Page: Interviews with Children's Book Illustrators, Sylvia and Kenneth Marantz,, McFarland & Company, USA, 1992
  4. ^ Who's Who of Australian Children's Writers, D W Thorpe, Australia, 1992
  5. ^ Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year
  6. ^ A History of Australian Children's Book Illustration, Marcie Muir, Oxford University Press, Australia, 1982
  7. ^ Authors & Illustrators of Australian Children's Books, Walter McVitty, editor, Hodder & Stoughton, Australia, 1989
  8. ^ Family Circle, Australia, article, Pamela Ruskin, 2 May 1980
  9. ^ The Story Makers, Margaret Dunkle, editor, Oxford University Press, Australia, 1987

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • D'Arcy Niland — D Arcy Francis Niland (20 October 1917 – 29 March 1967) was an Australian novelist and short story writer, best known for The Shiralee. Life and writing career Niland was born in the rural town of Glen Innes, New South Wales, into a large… …   Wikipedia

  • Ruth Park — AM (born 24 August, possibly 1923)cite web |title= Ruth Park Biography |publisher= Austlit Agent Details |url= http://www.austlit.edu.au/run?ex=ShowAgent agentId=A$q8 |accessdate= 2007 08 01] is a New Zealand born author, who has spent most of… …   Wikipedia

  • Mulga Bill's Bicycle — Three men and a boy on a bicycle ca. 1896 ca. 1904 in Victoria, Australia Mulga Bill s Bicycle is a poem written in 1896 by Banjo Paterson. The poem is a ballad.[1] Each line is a fourteener, having fourteen syllables and sev …   Wikipedia

  • New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards — The New South Wales Premier s Literary Awards were established in 1979 by the New South Wales Premier Neville Wran. Commenting on its purpose, Wran said: We want the arts to take, and be seen to take, their proper place in our social priorities.… …   Wikipedia

  • Margaret Wild — is an Australian author. She was born in 1948 in Eschew, a small town in South Africa, and came to Australia in 1972. She now lives in Sydney. Before becoming a fulltime writer, Margaret was a journalist for newspapers and magazines and then she… …   Wikipedia

  • Bilby Award Winners — The Bilby Award is awarded annually by the Queensland s Branch of the Children s Book Council Awards.cite web |title= What are the BILBY awards? |publisher= Children s Book Council of Australia (Qld Branch) Inc |url=… …   Wikipedia

  • Children's Book of the Year Award: Early Childhood — Awarded for Excellence in Australian early childhood books Presented by Children s Book Council of Australia Country Australia First awarded 2001 …   Wikipedia

  • Paso Del Norte Group — The Paso Del Norte Group (PDNG) is a private organization of approximately 360 business and civic leaders of El Paso, Texas, United States. The group, meant to be representative of the El Paso region, also includes members from Ciudad Juárez,… …   Wikipedia

  • 109th United States Congress — Speaker Hastert (2006) Duration: January 3, 2005 – January 3, 2007 Senate President: Dick Cheney (R) …   Wikipedia

  • 107th United States Congress — United States Capitol (2002) Duration: January 3, 2001 – January 3, 2003 Senate President: Al Gore (D) …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”