How Illustration Changes A Story
Home
Professional Practice
Materials
Morals/ethics
Conclusion
In this blog I will discuss the topic of how stories can be told or interpreted differently depending on how they are illustrated, using Lewis Carroll’s Alice in wonderland as an example for my discussion. I will use the topics of Professional practice, materials and processes and ethical and moral considerations as focusses for my research.
References:
(1). Alice (2015) John Tenniel and his illustrations, Alice-in-wonderland.net. Lenny. Available at: https://www.alice-in-wonderland.net/resources/background/tenniel-and-his-illustrations/ (Accessed: 29 April 2023).
(2). Rebecca Dautremer (no date) Rebeccadautremer.com. Available at: https://rebeccadautremer.com/ (Accessed: 20 April 2023).
(3). ILLUSTRATION FEATURE Chris Riddell’s Wonderland (no date) Words & Pictures. Available at: https://www.wordsandpics.org/2021/08/illustration-feature-chris-riddells.html (Accessed: 29 April 2023).
(4). Dapo Adeola (2019) MMB Creative. Available at: https://mmbcreative.com/clients/dapo-adeola/ (Accessed: 28 April 2023).
(5). Wikipedia contributors (2022) Dapo Adeola, Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Available at: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dapo_Adeola&oldid=1091793268.
(6). ‘If we’re only given one image of ourselves, it severely limits our aspirations as people.’ - Dapo Adeola (no date) Org.uk. Available at: https://www.booktrust.org.uk/news-and-features/features/2020/january/Dapo-Adeola-Interview-2019/ (Accessed: 28 April 2023).