Top 31 Quotes & Sayings by Quentin Blake

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English cartoonist Quentin Blake.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Quentin Blake

Sir Quentin Saxby Blake is an English cartoonist, caricaturist, illustrator and children's writer. He has illustrated over 300 books, including 18 written by Roald Dahl, which are among his most popular works. For his lasting contribution as a children's illustrator he won the biennial international Hans Christian Andersen Award in 2002, the highest recognition available to creators of children's books. From 1999 to 2001, he was the inaugural British Children's Laureate. He is a patron of the Association of Illustrators.

I think it is important for children to read different things to find out about their emotions and other people's emotions. It is an enormous source of education and culture.
I suppose illustration tends to live in the streets, rather than in the hermetically sealed atmosphere of the museum, and consequently it has come to be taken less seriously.
If you want to read and you want to draw, that helps you to express yourself. — © Quentin Blake
If you want to read and you want to draw, that helps you to express yourself.
Going to hospital is rather like going to an alien planet.
I don't have anything interesting to conceal or reveal in my private life, and it is really only my work and professional life that I want to talk about.
The hateful thing about most hotels nowadays is that they only have duvets. I hate duvets.
I love the sea, but I avoid any sort of seaside resort that has skyscrapers or seaside entertainments.
I do like children, but only as people. Not as if they're a special category.
Being positive may be a character defect of mine.
I'm trained as a teacher; that's the only thing I've got a certificate for.
I don't like leaving work behind. I hate the idea that something might be happening on the drawing board at home that I am going to miss.
You see, I don't draw from life at all, but I do look out of my window a lot.
I don't feel as if I belong to an age group.
I've never quite worked out how to do holidays. I've got a house in France which I suppose is a kind of holiday house. But it's really only so I can go on drawing when I get there. I'm never far away from the feeling that I want to be getting on with something.
As an illustrator you need to understand the human body - but having looked at and understood nature, you must develop an ability to look away and capture the balance between what you've seen and what you imagine.
I find that I can't work and listen to radio - either I find I don't like it and it distracts me, or I do like it and I want to listen to it.
With my pictures, what I hope is that it encourages the reader to imagine more pictures of his own.
I have an assistant who's very good at email, so I don't struggle with it.
I don't think there's an illustrator who's as good as a Titian or a Rembrandt... but then, Rembrandt was a bit of an illustrator on the quiet, you know?
I know some children's writers write for specific children, or for the children they once were, but I never have. I just thought children might like my sort of visual humour.
Guinea pigs are quite difficult to draw, I think, because they're so furry.
I think it is the fact that birds are two-legged, like us, which gives them something of our balance and gesture and makes them nearer to us.
Television is kind of a disappointment. I often want to watch it, but I find it quite hard - I don't like soaps, reality TV or celebrity chefs.
Sometimes I think people get into trouble because they can't say what they want to. — © Quentin Blake
Sometimes I think people get into trouble because they can't say what they want to.
It was an accident of circumstance that I never married.
Inspiration is some mysterious blessing which happens when the wheels are turning smoothly.
A lot of my travel is at least partly work, visiting schools and libraries, especially in France.
I draw every day - unless I'm being interviewed.
Sometimes people think drawing and painting is mucking about when actually it is a highly skilled activity.
Well, one always has an instinct to be a painter, and I've done quite a lot of painting at one time or another, though not with any public success.
I don't wait for inspiration. I'm not, in fact, quite sure what inspiration is, but I'm sure that if it is going to turn up, my having started work is the precondition of its arrival.
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