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P J Lynch

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Name
  
P. Lynch

Role
  
Artist

Education
  
University of Brighton


P. J. Lynch wwwpjlynchgallerycomimagespjjpg


Awards
  
Kate Greenaway Medal, Bisto Book of the Year, Bisto Merit Awards

Similar People
  
Amy Hest, Antonia Barber, Kate Greenaway

Patrick James Lynch (born 2 March 1962), known professionally as P. J. Lynch, is an Irish artist and illustrator of children's books. He won both the 1995 and 1997 Kate Greenaway Medals from the British Library Association, recognising the year's best children's book illustration by a British subject.

Contents

P. J. Lynch pjlynch Tumblr

Early Years

P. J. Lynch PJ Lynch Snow White

Born in Belfast, Lynch was the youngest of five children. He was interested in art from an early age, often choosing to spend his free periods during school in the art department. He recalls that Belfast in the 1970s was a "scary" place for a teenager, and he used drawing and reading as a "way of escaping for a while from the horrors that were happening around me in the real world." He attended the Brighton College of Art and departed in 1984 to begin working on children's books.

Book Illustrations

P. J. Lynch PJ Lynch MAGOROSCAPE

Lynch's first illustrated book was A Bag of Moonshine by Alan Garner (1986), a collection of folklore tales from England and Wales. For that work he won the Mother Goose Award, given to the "most exciting newcomer to British children's book illustration". Since then folklore—traditional stories, legends, and fairy tales—has been a recurring subject of his work.

P. J. Lynch PJ Lynch MAGOROSCAPE

The Christmas Miracle of Jonathan Toomey by Susan Wojciechowski, published by Walker Books in 1995, tells the story of a gloomy woodcutter who gradually recovers his ability to find joy in life. It proved to be very popular, with sales in the United States exceeding one million copies. Lynch's illustrations were lauded for their "exceptional range of texture and colour", and earned him both the Kate Greenaway Medal and the Christopher Medal. James Earl Jones recorded a Grammy-nominated reading and a movie based on the book was released in 2007. Jonathan Toomey is Lynch's work most widely held by WorldCat participating libraries.

He won his second Greenaway Medal two years later for illustrating When Jessie Came Across the Sea by Amy Hest (1997). No one has won three.

Other media

Lynch has created posters for both Opera Ireland and the Abbey Theatre. He has illustrated four sets of Christmas stamps for An Post, as well as other individual stamps. The stamps he has designed have been acclaimed for their "level of detail, mood and emotion", which give them "a vivid life of their own."

In 2006 Lynch completed work on two large scale murals in oils on the theme of Gulliver's Travels for the new Cavan County Library.

Personal life

Lynch and his wife Barbara were married in 2002 on his fortieth birthday. As of 2007 they live in Dublin with their two sons and daughter.

Published works

Lynch has illustrated more than 20 books.

He was one of many illustrators who contributed to An ABC Picture Gallery, a collaborative alphabet book written by the Dyslexia Institute staff (Oxford: Butterworth–Heinemann, 1999; ISBN 9780434804726) — "a full page illustration for each letter of the alphabet from some of the illustrators of today" with text insights about their work.

  • A Bag of Moonshine (1986), retold by Alan Garner, collection — winner of the 1987 Mother Goose Award
  • The Raggy Taggy Toys (1988), by Joyce Dunbar
  • Melisande (1988), by E. Nesbit (1900)
  • Fairy Tales of Ireland (1990), by William Butler Yeats (19 stories from 1888 and 1892 collections)
  • Stories for Children (1990), by Oscar Wilde (fl. 1880–1895)
  • East o' the Sun and West o' the Moon (1992), translated from Norwegian by George Webbe Dasent (1910)
  • The Steadfast Tin Soldier (1986), by Hans Christian Andersen (1838)
  • The Candlewick Book of Fairy Tales (1993), retold by Sarah Hayes, collection
  • The Snow Queen (1994), by Hans Christian Andersen (1845)
  • Catkin (1994), by Antonia Barber
  • The Christmas Miracle of Jonathan Toomey (1995), by Susan Wojciechowski — winner of the 1995 Greenaway Medal
  • The King of Ireland's Son (1996), retold by Brendan Behan (1962)
  • When Jessie Came Across the Sea (1997), by Amy Hest — winner of the 1997 Greenaway Medal
  • Grandad's Prayers of the Earth (1999), by Douglas Wood
  • The Names Upon the Harp: Irish Myth and Legend (2000), retold by Marie Heaney, collection
  • Ignis (2001), by Gina Wilson
  • The Bee-Man of Orn (2004), by Frank R. Stockton (1883)
  • A Christmas Carol (2006), by Charles Dickens (1843)
  • The Gift of the Magi (2008), by O. Henry (1906)
  • Lincoln and His Boys (2009), by Rosemary Wells
  • No One But You (2011), by Douglas Wood
  • References

    P. J. Lynch Wikipedia