Jump to content

Istvan Banyai: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Lecso (talk | contribs)
Undid revision 235289409 by Lecso (talk)
m add images
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:Absolutistvan.jpg|thumbnail|left|"Absolut Istvan", 1998]]
'''Istvan Banyai''' (born in Budapest, Hungary, February 27, 1949) gained prominence as a commercial [[illustrator]] and [[animator]] in the mid-1980s when he emigrated to the United States. In 1995 Banyai produced his first wordless children's book, the masterful "Zoom." Honored as one of the best children's books of the year by the New York Times and Publishers Weekly, "Zoom" was soon published in 18 languages. With increasing complexity and conceptual originality, he went on to author four more books and illustrate many more in collaboration with other writers and poets. "It's refreshing to encounter a group of virtually wordless books that invite children to consider their world from a point of view they may not have otherwise considered. The most stunning is "Zoom," written -- or, rather, imagined and then illustrated -- by Istvan Banyai." <ref>http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F01E4D61439F931A25752C1A963958260</ref>
'''Istvan Banyai''' (born in Budapest, Hungary, February 27, 1949) gained prominence as a commercial [[illustrator]] and [[animator]] in the mid-1980s when he emigrated to the United States. In 1995 Banyai produced his first wordless children's book, the masterful "Zoom." Honored as one of the best children's books of the year by the New York Times and Publishers Weekly, "Zoom" was soon published in 18 languages. With increasing complexity and conceptual originality, he went on to author four more books and illustrate many more in collaboration with other writers and poets. "It's refreshing to encounter a group of virtually wordless books that invite children to consider their world from a point of view they may not have otherwise considered. The most stunning is "Zoom," written -- or, rather, imagined and then illustrated -- by Istvan Banyai." <ref>http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F01E4D61439F931A25752C1A963958260</ref>


Line 6: Line 7:
[[Image:ZoomIst.png|thumbnail|left|"ZOOM", 1995.]]
[[Image:ZoomIst.png|thumbnail|left|"ZOOM", 1995.]]
[[Image:Rem_istvan_banyai.jpg|thumbnail|left|"REM: Rapid Eye Movement", 1998.]]
[[Image:Rem_istvan_banyai.jpg|thumbnail|left|"REM: Rapid Eye Movement", 1998.]]
[[Image:Other_side.jpg|thumbnail|left|"The Other Side", 2005]]

==Books==
==Books==


Line 25: Line 26:
___ Delzell, Tom. ''The Slang of Sin'' (Merriam Webster, 20 )
___ Delzell, Tom. ''The Slang of Sin'' (Merriam Webster, 20 )



=
== Awards ==
== Awards ==
___Childrens Choice Award for Zoom (Penguin, 1997.)
Childrens Choice Award for Zoom (Penguin, 1997.)

=References=
=References=



Revision as of 02:12, 31 August 2008

File:Absolutistvan.jpg
"Absolut Istvan", 1998

Istvan Banyai (born in Budapest, Hungary, February 27, 1949) gained prominence as a commercial illustrator and animator in the mid-1980s when he emigrated to the United States. In 1995 Banyai produced his first wordless children's book, the masterful "Zoom." Honored as one of the best children's books of the year by the New York Times and Publishers Weekly, "Zoom" was soon published in 18 languages. With increasing complexity and conceptual originality, he went on to author four more books and illustrate many more in collaboration with other writers and poets. "It's refreshing to encounter a group of virtually wordless books that invite children to consider their world from a point of view they may not have otherwise considered. The most stunning is "Zoom," written -- or, rather, imagined and then illustrated -- by Istvan Banyai." [1]

While he continues to produced commercial illustration for publication such as The New Yorker, Playboy, Rolling Stone, Time and Atlantic Monthly; cover art for Sony and Verve Records; and animated short films for Nickelodeon and MTV Europe, he is internationally respected for his unique philosophical and iconoclastic vision, thus transcending the status of commercial illustrator to gifted artist. Banyai describes his art as "an organic combination of turn-of-the-century Viennese retro, interjected with American pop, some European absurdity added for flavor, served on a cartoon-style color palette... no social realism added."

From Budapest to Paris, Los Angeles to Manhattan ("No illustrator surpasses Istvan Banyai at portraying the dream lives of today's New York and Los Angeles hip urban style-setters.") [2]he now lives with his wife in the woods of Connecticut among deer and flowers.

File:ZoomIst.png
"ZOOM", 1995.
File:Rem istvan banyai.jpg
"REM: Rapid Eye Movement", 1998.
"The Other Side", 2005

Books

Banyai, Istvan. Zoom (New York:Viking, 1995)

____Re-Zoom (New York:Penguin Group, 1998)

____REM: Rapid Eye Movement (New York:Viking, 1998)

____Minus Equals Plus with introduction by Kurt Anderson (New York:Abrams, 2001)

____The Other Side (Chronicle Books, 2005)

___ Sandburg, Carl. Poems for Children: Nowhere near Old Enough to Vote (Random House, 19 )

____Park, Linda Sue. Tap Dancing on the Roof (Clarion Books, 19 )

___ Delzell, Tom. The Slang of Sin (Merriam Webster, 20 )


Awards

Childrens Choice Award for Zoom (Penguin, 1997.)

References