






A crazy few days have taken me first to Cheltenham, for a magical Ella Bella concert at the Music festival (you can read about that on my Ella Bella site by CLICKING HERE) and then to London for the very first - and completely triumphant - Pop Up Festival. This is the brainchild of Dylan Calder, and it's undoubtedly the best children's book festival I've ever seen. Not that I saw that much... as the main Festival was in the lovely, hidden gardens of Coram's Fields, near King's Cross. I was just across the road at the Brunswick Centre, behind the Renoir Cinema.
And there, on a stage in broad daylight the giant pop up book made a few weeks ago (see here) was put up and children came in waves to grab outsized pens and fill it with pictures and colours and stories. We had dragons and princesses and castles and witches and a number of maurauding black panthers courtesy of Raphael, whose father runs the Splats Theatre Company (and who is creating the theatre version of Katie's Picture Show). Yes the whole thing was deliciously mad, and the turning of the pages and the revealing of the pop ups never failed to bring gasps of delight from the children.
It was lovely to see so many friends, and some of my own old students from Cambridge Art School (Children's Book MA) as well (and yes, I made them add their own talents to the project! The book contains original pieces by Nicola Killen, Susannah Moores, Emma Symons' children (!), and Patrick Kennedy (and son).



The best bit? seeing children sitting contentedly INSIDE a giant book, crawling through the pages, and through the cut out doorway, brandishing pens and losing themselves in concentrated effort. Some spent hours lost in a reverie of their own creation. And when it was done it was taken to Coram's Fields and set outside the bookshop tent, where it became a tunnel, a slide, a climbing frame, a spur to storytelling... and of course what it was always supposed to be: a giant pop up book for a giant pop up festival!
Brilliant!! I wonder if there's a market for them as toys instead of awful plastic wendy houses.
ReplyDeleteThere used to be giant cardboard castles that you could draw all over... simular idea, but a book might be more narrative. I think children love things on this scale... it's why they climb inside boxes and ignore the gift from inside, on Christmas day!!!
ReplyDeletewonderful. And isn't Dylan just a lovely man! Brilliant festival. WOuld love to get Dylan and Derek Cobbley from Swansea Wordplay together.
ReplyDeleteYes! Dylan is an absolute kindred spirit, and although I simply didn't have a chance to look around I could tell he'd pulled off something truly special!
ReplyDeleteOh my...now I want one even more. That is quite the most fantastic and wonderful thing I have seen in ages.
ReplyDeleteJames you and Dylan are part of a magical group of people who leave the world a much better place.
Charlotte, how kind. But I can only accept the compliment if you include yourself in the merry gang of magical people :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you kind sir, will accept as graciously as I am able.
ReplyDeleteAAAAAAWWWW!!! James that is AWESOME!!! Look at the children faces!! :_)
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed my brief stint on the book and I have to say the end result looks brilliant, especially the pop-up castle!
ReplyDeleteIt was great to see you Nicola, and I loved the giraffe. I hope whoever has the book now knows how priceless it is!!!!
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