Robert’s Snow…Meet Illustrator Sara Kahn!

“Please pick me! Please pick me!” said the snowflake…one of more than a hundred being auctioned off for the Robert’s Snow: For Cancer’s Cure Fundraiser

Today, we feature this colorful creation by illustrator Sara Kahn and offer blog readers a chance to win one of her books and a signed Giclee print of a painting from On My Block.

Blogger’s Note:  I’m a children’s author and a middle school English teacher, so my students are collaborating on our series of illustrator profiles! Today’s feature is courtesy of the Global Citizens in 4th period English class.  (The pleading snowflake at the beginning of this post was their brainchild…. Clearly, they were listening when I talked about leads that try to grab a reader’s attention!)

When Robert Mercer was diagnosed with bone cancer, he and his wife, Grace Lin, wanted to do something about it, so they came up with the idea for Robert’s Snow. Robert’s Snow is a fundraiser where children’s book illustrators are invited to create snowflakes, which will be auctioned off to raise money for the Dana Farber Cancer Institute. Robert is no longer with us, but his spirit lives on in this year’s magical collection of snowflakes.

Sara Kahn is one of the illustrators who made a snowflake for the 2007 fundraiser, and we’re interviewing her today.

Sara grew up in Iran and has illustrated American and Iranian children’s books.  She has illustrated for both Cricket and Cicada magazines.  When she was three, she painted on the kitchen floor, and the entire family was kicked out of the house.  In school, she got in trouble for her art as well because she drew a caricature of one of the teachers she didn’t like very much.  When the teacher found the caricature, she removed Sara from class, and her parents had to come in the next day. 

Since then, Sara Kahn’s illustrations have appeared in many books in both Persian and English, such as On My Block and The Best Children’s Books in the World.

Sara has won many awards and scholarships from around the world.  To see some of her work, click here or here.  She has been painting and drawing for 35 years. Her work has been shown in Spain, Japan, the Slovak Republic, Italy, the United States, and Iran. 

Welcome, Sara! First of all, we love your snowflake! How did you come up with the design for it?

 Being a cat person, I never suspected I might like goldfish until my husband and I installed a fish pond as part of a yard project last year. Very soon I found myself quite attached to the fish–they are now so tame they nibble on my hands and toes when I wade into the pond to remove algae! The fish gather underneath our lily pads on sunny days, like we might sit under umbrellas.

I was fascinated when I found out that both water lilies and fish are considered lucky in Chinese culture. One item is in the water and the other one over it, one lucky item protects the other. I found this relationship interesting and decided to incorporate both lucky items into this year’s snowflake. 

What made me think of goldfish for the snowflake–besides the new pond–was the similarity of the corners of the snowflake to the shape of fish tails. I then thought about if I wanted to paint three fish (one on every other arm); five, leaving the hanging arm of the snowflake free; or six, one on each arm. I found from further research that six is a lucky number in Chinese culture, so I made this a “Triple Luck” snowflake by including six fish and their lily pads.

We enjoyed reading about you and your background on your website, especially since you lived in Iran, and we hear so much about that country in the news now. You lived there during another tumultuous time. What was it like to be in Iran in 1979?

I lived in Iran during revolution and war.

I was thirteen at the time of the revolution. It was amazing to see how friendly people became and the sense of caring for each other was so immense in the first days of revolution. It was the amazing feeling of the promise that everything will be the way you always wanted it to be and that hope is so intoxicating. Also–there was no school for almost five months!! That may have been my favorite part.

War: the first days were scary, but after one month then it became part of the daily routine. Every morning at 10, Iraq sent five ground to ground missiles to Tehran. I recall going to the rooftops with my friends to look at them. They flew parallel to each other and made this sound swshweeeee and fell thump on the ground. Then according to where it fell, we would start calling the people in that neighborhood to make sure they were ok. They also set air raids at night. One of the bombs that they dropped from the plane hit a birthday party. The dad had gone out to buy dinner for everybody. When he came back home, he found that the bomb had hit his house, all the guests and the family were killed. That was a horrific incident. I made a painting of it, at that time I was in the university studying art. I cried for a good portion of the painting, I think my tears got mixed with the colors.

So living in Iran has influenced your ideas for painting?

Yes. I also love Persian miniatures. There is no perspective in them. The painter paints what he knows, not what he sees. Perspective is just the limitation of the eyesight. Sometimes the painter depicts the scene inside a house behind a wall where one would normally not see. I try to use these qualities in my art.

Persian Painting and literature always used symbolic language. I try to do that in my books and paintings too. In the river and sun book, the girl is small when she is withdrawn from the environment and as soon as she notices that how she feels is totally in her power, she suddenly becomes much bigger in the page.

   

       

In the Tale of the Goat and the Date Palm  you see 12 goats running around the earth.

That is not mentioned in the text, but I chose to make them 12, to reflect the number of the months in the year and hours in half a day. I also included the motif that looks like a star…that is the symbol of goat horns in four directions, the goat’s horn was a symbol of the moon and moon was the symbol of the goddess of the moon, Anahita.

What would you like to tell kids through your books?

Well, each illustration or each painting has a different visual message.

The illustrator Dusan Kallay, says: “Illustrating a story is like making sketches, you walk in the imaginary world of the writer and you whatever you illustrate is what you see in this imaginary world.” Of course each person’s imaginary world of the writer’s text is different. As Tatiana Mavrina says, it is as if you pick up a colored glass and look through it to see the world in a different light, what we as illustrators do is to share our visual experience with others.

In my speech for the IBBY conference in 1994 where I was included in the honor list for the illustration of the book Tale of the Goat and the Date Palm   I said: “Every illustration is born each time a kid looks at it”. I would love for my illustrations to be born again and again. Each time one looks at a painting or an illustration they will look at it in a different light, one’s experiences change from moment to moment and one’s acquaintance with the illustration and the painting increases every time one looks at it.

Are you working on any new paintings? If so, what are they called?

Yes, I am painting a dreamscape called “Sea, sky and land” and illustrating a book about the life of a dog who moves to San Francisco.

Do you mostly draw or paint your illustrations?

I paint them, I even paint my sketches. Most artists start from a sketch but I start directly from the paint on the paper. Recently, because most American publishers want to see the sketch, I started the reverse work of sketching after I made the painting! Now I am trying to convince myself to make sketches but honestly the sketches do nothing for me, I already have sketched the illustration or painting in my mind.

For my books in Iran, I used to put some toothpaste on my toothbrush and start pacing the room and imagining the illustration. Sometimes I paced the room so many times that my toothpaste had a thin dry surface on it! I thought of the book and how I wanted it to look like–I think of a book as a whole, not single images. Then I decided which illustration was to be the highlight and I started from that and then worked the ending and the beginning from that illustration…then I set it to words…unlike the process here, in America the process is almost completely reversed, one starts from breaking down the text and the pencil sketches.

The print that our drawing winners will receive is “The Garden of 32 Cats” from your book On My Block, inspired by your grandmother’s cats.  Of all your grandmother’s cats in that picture, do you have a favorite?

The one that is reaching for a fish–she was the only litter from a wild cat. I rescued her and she became my kitten. This kitten ran to me in joy every afternoon and greeted me dearly. She once sneaked in the bedroom and slept at my foot.

Now the rapid-fire questions…thing that kids (and adults who think like them) need to know!

What’s your most embarrassing moment ever (that you’re willing to share)?

I have so many of them; it is hard to pick one out! And I should say this is very embarrassing in itself!

What’s your favorite dessert?

Naan Pangeree, a Persian specialty; it is paper thin deep fried pastry.
It is very similar to Norwegian Rosettes.

If you could be any animal, what would you be and why?

This reminds me of the character test I heard about in high-school. You ask the person to name three animals they like and say why they like them, the first one is who they want people to think about what they are, their public image, the second one is what people really think you are and the third one is what you really are. Now, this makes it hard for me to answer, without thinking I am exposing my innermost feelings of how I like to be introduced to the public! Despite all that, I’d like to be a tiger; she is a big cat, kind to her cubs but fierce to the enemy. What fascinates me about a tiger–which is what also I wish to be able to do–is to have the ability to be fierce and then to be kind, when I need to be so.

What’s your favorite TV show?

I do not watch TV at all, occasionally my husband watches “Law and Order” and I’ll check it out with him. Both of us are simply too busy to watch TV.

Favorite dinner?

Any dinner I make that turns out the way it should! I love to cook but some experiments fail tragically.

Favorite sport?

Swimming. I have to admit that I am not a very sportive person, but I like swimming, hiking, and rock climbing.

Thanks so much for joining us, Sara, and for sharing  your time and talent for Robert’s Snow!

For a special Robert’s Snow giveaway, Sara Kahn is donating copies of On My Block and signed Giclee prints of “The Garden of 32 Cats”  for three lucky winners of our drawing.  To enter the drawing, visit the Robert’s Snow auction site (feel free to place a nice fat bid while you’re there!) and then come back here and leave a comment about any snowflake that you especially like.  Winners will be drawn and announced on Kate’s Book Blog in early December, after the auction. 

In the mean time, LET IT SNOW!!

Confession…

I have a bad habit with book festivals and book fairs.  I know that when I’m participating in one, I should spend the weeks leading up to it preparing my presentation and choosing my readings and things like that.  What I tend to do instead is get sidetracked by all the other authors participating and go on a reading binge.  My book festival conversations tend to go like this:

Husband:  What are you doing for the Rochester Children’s Book Festival?

Me: Did you see who’s going to be there??!  James Howe and Tedd Arnold and Michelle Knudsen!  Can you believe that?  E and I loved LIBRARY LION….

Husband: Yes, but…

Me: I hope I get to sit near Tedd Arnold. He has this new young adult book out…

Husband:  Is your presentation ready?

Me:  …and Vivian Van Velde is going to be there…and Coleen Paratore…

You get the idea. 


This Saturday, November 3 is the Rochester Children’s Book Festival, with an AMAZING lineup of children’s authors and illustrators.  I’m participating in the festival’s “Tween Time” showcase of historical fiction, and my kids have convinced me that I need to dress up as my main character again since it was such a hit in Burlington on Halloween.  I’m portraying Abigail Smith, an 18th century girl who disguises herself as a boy to fight in a Revolutionary War battle on Lake Champlain.  If you’re near Rochester, please drop by ‘Tween Time at 10:45. I’ll be there with my hardtack and my haversack, ready to share!

In a rare moment of planning ahead, I finished my presentation last week, so I’ve felt entitled to go on a reading binge of other festival authors’ books.  Here are a couple reviews….

I loved James Howe’s novel THE MISFITS, where a group of middle school outsiders challenges the school’s name-calling habit as a student council campaign platform.  Until last week, though, I hadn’t gotten around to reading the sequel, TOTALLY JOE.  This is a lighter look at what it’s like to be a gay kid in middle school.  Howe introduces readers to Joe Bunch through his main character’s “alphabiography,” a series of essays he has to write about his life, with each topic starting with a different letter of the alphabet (26 chapters, including one on the ubiquitous alphabet-book xylophone, for those keeping track).  Through the assignment, Joe tells the story of his first sort-of boyfriend, middle school bullies, his creative, supportive Aunt Pam, and his quest to be Totally Joe.  It’s honest and tough sometimes without losing its fun voice.  Howe has provided a particular gift in this novel – a book about being gay that’s age-appropriate for someone who’s still in middle school and not ready for some of the edgier titles that seem to abound in YA literature.

I also want to talk about RAT LIFE, Tedd Arnold’s first foray into young adult literature, which was so great that when I finished it, I trotted right over to nominate it for a Cybil Award in the YA Category.  (Nominations are open until November 21st, in case you haven’t nominated your favorites yet!) 

RAT LIFE is one of those books that made me laugh one minute and gasp in shock the next.  Its narrator, Todd, is a would-be writer growing up in Upstate NY in 1972.  In the first pages of the book, he hears about a body found in a river and meets a mysterious character who calls himself Rat.  Todd wonders if  Rat, an underaged recruit who’s just back from a tour of Vietnam, has something to do with that body in the river, and those suspicions mount throughout the novel, all the way to its dizzying climax.  I could go on and on about the humor, the interesting writing strategies Arnold employed, the gut-wrenching scene that almost made me stop reading but is so important to the book… but I’ll let you discover this one for yourself.  Don’t start reading until you have some time; you won’t want to take breaks.