THE BIRD KING and other sketches

The eight eggs, 2009, pencil, A3

The eight eggs, 2009, pencil, A3

Doodles inspired by Inuit sculpture, brush pen, pencil, A4

Doodles inspired by Inuit sculpture, brush pen, pencil, A4

Portrait of the artist as a young man, pencil, A3

Portrait of the artist as a young man, pencil, A3

Studies for ‘dormitory suburb’ and ‘broken toys’, 2000 - 2007, pencil, tape.

Studies for ‘dormitory suburb’ and ‘broken toys’, 2000 - 2007, pencil, tape.

Sketches for The Red Tree, 2000, toner, acrylic, pencil

Sketches for The Red Tree, 2000, toner, acrylic, pencil

Anthropologists / Automatic teller, c. 2000, pencil on paper, A4

Anthropologists / Automatic teller, c. 2000, pencil on paper, A4

Mexico city sketch, 2007, pastel and charcoal on paper, A3

Mexico city sketch, 2007, pastel and charcoal on paper, A3

Simon / Ryan (portraits of high school friends), c. 1999, acrylic, pastel, pencil

Simon / Ryan (portraits of high school friends), c. 1999, acrylic, pastel, pencil

Notebook pages, c. 2005, biro and pencil

Notebook pages, c. 2005, biro and pencil

Notebook pages, c. 2007, biro and pencil

Notebook pages, c. 2007, biro and pencil

Notebook pages, c. 2005, biro and pencil

Notebook pages, c. 2005, biro and pencil

Trees in a paddock, Bundanon, 2008, pastel on paper, A2

Trees in a paddock, Bundanon, 2008, pastel on paper, A2

Mount Lawley landscape with night train (view from my roof), 1998, sketch for an oil painting, toner, acrylic, pencil

Mount Lawley landscape with night train (view from my roof), 1998, sketch for an oil painting, toner, acrylic, pencil

 

The Bird King (2010, expanded edition 2019) is a collection of various sketches: random jottings, preliminary designs for book, film and theatre projects, sketchbook pages and drawings from life. Each of these represent some aspect of a working process, whereby stories generally evolve from visual research and free-wheeling doodles. They are also 'unfinished' pieces created in a single sitting, not originally intended for publication, and for that reason perhaps more revealing of a personal style (and particular obsessions) than other more polished artwork.

128 pages long, and in a format that emulates my actual sketchbooks, The Bird King includes some written thoughts on the practice of drawing and explanatory notes for each image.

Originally intended as a small self-published collection for convention audiences, The Bird King has since become a popular reference, especially for new illustrators, and translated into Japanese, French, Spanish and other languages. In the US it is published as The Bird King: An Artist’s Notebook (Scholastic)

An expanded edition of The Bird King was published by Walker UK in 2019. It includes an additional 50 pages of selections from the intervening decade since the original volume was released: a few examples below. You can find out more here.

 
Walking with mother, 2018, pencil, A3

Walking with mother, 2018, pencil, A3

Taking a line for a walk, 2018, cover illustration for expanded edition, Walker Books UK, 2019, pencil, digital

Taking a line for a walk, 2018, cover illustration for expanded edition, Walker Books UK, 2019, pencil, digital