by Nicola Thornton

April 28, 2010

Pau Estrada: Illustrator - Catalan - 48

I am very interested in bringing the past back to life through illustrations and documentaries. I made a film about my parents, because they met in Michigan over 50 years ago—my mum, an American, just out of high school, and my dad, a Catalan student—and it was such an unlikely encounter, considering how little people travelled in those days.

I started illustrating books when I was 15. I had always been the artist of the family and it was really thanks to my mother, because she started writing English textbooks and I was her illustrator.

I studied at the Rhode Island School of Design. It’s the school where the Talking Heads came from. I always think it’s funny that their most famous alumni became musicians.

The Picasso children’s book [Picasso y Minou] came about through my editor in the States. She had seen my private sketchbooks where I did my crazy streams of consciousness, and thought I could do it. With children’s books, you are usually restricted to drawing nice things and I had the need to express another side of myself.

My style is very unusual for Barcelona. Here most people do ‘la línia clara’: it’s very graphic and flat looking, very cool. To do the Picasso book, I wanted to take the style a few notches up to match the material I was working with. I really had to commit myself to get the drawings right, to get the figures and the expressions right. It was a process of improvement and effort.

I spent some time in Paris to get a feel for the place and explore where Picasso had lived. I got into studying French, as I always had the idea that a cultured person should speak French. The foremost French expert on Picasso, his friend Pierre Daix, had the nicest words to say about this book.

We’ve just presented the Spanish and Catalan editions. It was one of my dreams to have a book published here in my city and to present it at the Picasso Museum. Sometimes the wildest dreams do come true.

Barcelona is such a nice city now. My memories of growing up in Gràcia are of seeing buildings being torn down and of old houses and gardens being lost, and all these very ugly buildings being put up. It was extremely sad. They started the renovations in the Eighties. When they unveiled La Pedrera, it was so beautiful, people couldn’t believe it because for years it had been all grey and run down.

by Nicola Thornton

April 28, 2010

Latest Comments

Be the first to post...

Add your thoughts

  

All comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

Barcelona Metropolitan Issue 183
  • Barcelona News: Tuesday 22nd May

    Trade unions estimate that 55 percent of members are taking part in education strike - FC Barcelona presents new season strip - Obama calls on ECB to buy Spanish public debt

    May 22, 2012

  • Barcelona News: Monday 21st May

    Rajoy invited to growth summit by Italian leader - Heavy rain forecast for the start of the week in Barcelona - Spanish 2012 budgets to go through final Congress exam this week

    May 21, 2012

  • Barcelona news: Friday 18th May

    Moody's reduce Spanish banks rating; TMB claims there are over 40,000 fraudulent Metro passengers daily; late credit payments rise to the highest in 18 years; Rajoy plans to meet Merkel and Hollande to discuss future of the euro

    May 18, 2012

Metropolitan's Twitter Feed
    Built with Metro Publisher™