On the 15 of May 2024, award winning illustrator Chris Riddell led an online illustration workshop with 10-14 year old, Berlin-based participants of the Seen and Heard project. Unsurprisingly, he began by telling a story. When Chris was 4 years old he was given a box of crayons. Very efficiently, he opened the box and began drawing on the walls of his home. Eager to encourage his interest in art while saving her walls, his mother visited a paper factory and brought home a big parcel wrapped in brown paper. ‘This’, she explained to the young Chris, ‘is where you go when you want to draw.’ And draw he did! Magically, no matter how many papers Chris would take from the brown package they never seemed to run out. He would practice drawing every day and if the picture did not look like what he imagined he would crumple it up and start over. Little did Chris know, at the time, that his mother would pick up the papers, cut out the used bits and put the clean ones back into the brown package for him to use the next day. His passion for drawing never faded and even today the first thing Chris does when he wakes up is to add an illustration to his sketchbook. ‘Drawing the characters that I imagine is the beginning of a story for me’, Chris explains to the children listening and watching him draw live on screen while they chat.
‘What happens if you make a mistake?’ one child asks. ‘Well, then the important thing is to pretend, pretend that this is how you intended to draw the picture in the first place and then it will start to make sense!’ Chris replies. He encourages the children to ignore the voices that tell them they are not good artists. ‘Drawing is having a pencil in your hand and making marks on a paper. You must find your style and once you do, you will see that you can draw too’, he reminds them. Sharing his Three Ws method, Chris explains that drawing can help us to express how we feel, what has happened to us in our life and what we dream of or desire. Who? What? Where? helps us to establish the basis of any story that we would like to tell.
Linking the workshop to Seen and Heard’s core aim, which is to encourage children to speak up about their worries and dreams, their lived experiences as well as their fears and hopes, Chris invites them to think about the prompt ‘In Our Hands’. With a pencil in our hands what can we create? With the opportunity to be seen and heard, what do we want to say? The workshop participants practised drawing their hands and then connecting these drawings to characters. Each child’s picture was shown to Chris and as he commented the children were visibly curious about his reaction. They had prepared for this workshop by inventing characters and making a video which was sent to the artist in advance. They were thrilled when Chris reproduced some of their creations and asked questions that helped him to understand the characters better. ‘What happens if someone tells you that they don’t like your drawing?’ asked one of the children. ‘If that person is the writer whose story I am illustrating then I always listen to what they have to say and make changes accordingly. But, sometimes I don’t feel like making changes and so I write my own stories to have complete freedom over what drawings to match with them’, says Chris. While drawing is usually a quiet and soft practice, do not think that it is not an effective way of making noise about the things that we care about. Art is powerful and can be a creative way to protest. ‘If you want to slay dragons, make art’, Chris advocates as he draws yet another hand, thanks the children for their art work, and adds a sweet ‘Good Bye’.
The collaboration with the school Fichtelgebirge Grundschule, Berlin was co-ordinated on behalf of Seen and Heard project by Dr Farriba Schulz (Humboldt University). Special thanks go to Bojka Bogdanovic.
The illustration workshop is part of the creative and participatory process that Chris Riddell and Sita Brahmachari are engaging in to make a children’s book on the right to freedom of expression. The creation of the book is part of the EU funded project, Seen and Heard: Young People’s Voices and Freedom of Expression, and is overseen by Nicky Parker on behalf of Amnesty International Poland.