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Eva Eland has won the Klaus Flugge Prize for most exciting and promising newcomer to children's picture book illustration.
She was awarded the £5,000 prize for When Sadness Comes to Call (Andersen Press), in which sadness is personified as a shape that spends time with a child.
The winning book was announced this evening (16th September), with the judging panel describing it as "a masterpiece of minimalism".
Calling When Sadness Comes to Call “wise and simple, economical yet powerful”, judge and illustrator Mini Grey added: “When sadness calls there are things you can do. Eva’s book has the power to be a source of comfort and practical help. It gives you a map, it tells you of things you can do when uncomfortable feelings overwhelm you. Many people may need this book. I certainly do.”
On receiving the prize, Eland said: “When Sadness Comes to Call started as a personal exploration of difficult emotions in images and text during my studies at the MA Children’s Book Illustration in Cambridge and when I took my first version of this book to the Children’s Book Fair in Bologna, displayed on the stand of the Cambridge School of Art, I thought I had made something very peculiar and niche and had very little expectations of getting any serious interest. So when Andersen Press approached me and wanted to publish the book, I could hardly believe it. I didn’t think I was ready at all to publish my debut book as I was still studying and learning a lot, but I was gently reminded by my tutors that this was a great opportunity I shouldn’t let pass — and working with my publisher has been a wonderful, uplifting experience.
"To be shortlisted for the Klaus Flugge Prize was such a delightful surprise and a huge honour, and now I’ve learned I won the award as well! It’s very encouraging to receive recognition like this and it will also help me to dedicate more resources to developing my work further. And I can’t help but smile at the fact that this often unwanted guest, called sadness, is now finding its way and being welcomed by so many more people and children, with a little help from my book and the Klaus Flugge Prize.”
The judges also chose to award Highly Commended to Sabina Radeva for her Puffin children's edition of On the Origin of Species, an illustrated retelling of Darwin’s book.
Grey said: “It’s a work of ingenious inspiration that is able to take a complicated idea and make it visually simple, and that’s what On the Origin of Species does. Elegant illustrations help us venture deeper into the concepts and work on many levels: for example, showing the evolution of the eye, and convergent evolution. This beautifully produced book celebrates nature and the voice of Darwin.”
The prize was founded to honour publisher Klaus Flugge, who set up Andersen Press in 1976 and has discovered many illustrators, including David McKee, Tony Ross, Satoshi Kitamura, Ruth Brown and Susan Varley.
Alongside Grey, this year's judges were Jessica Love, Meera Ghanshamdas, bookseller at Moon Lane Ink, children’s book consultant Jake Hope and Pam Smy of Anglia Ruskin University. Julia Eccleshare, director of the Children’s Programme at the Hay Festival, was chair of the judges.
She said: “The Klaus Flugge Prize puts picture book illustration and illustrators into the spotlight and, in its fifth year, we were particularly excited by the standard of books submitted and by the talent and ambition demonstrated by the shortlisted illustrators. When Sadness Comes to Call stands out, however. It is very much a book for today when so many children will be experiencing sadness, struggling to understand why and how to express themselves. Yet it also has the makings of a classic, a perfect meeting of intention and delivery, and an example of how much picture books can do. We are also delighted to highlight On the Origin of Species, another outstanding picture book and a very different example of how illustration can successfully convey complex ideas clearly and with beauty.”