Kuwait Times

Renowned French author and illustrato­r Tomi Ungerer dies at 87

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The renowned French cartoonist, author and illustrato­r Tomi Ungerer, a lifelong activist who protested against racial segregatio­n, the Vietnam war and the election of US President Donald Trump, has died at the age of 87 in Ireland, his former adviser told AFP on Saturday. “He died in the night and his wife called me this (Saturday) morning on the phone,” Robert Walter, his former adviser and a friend “for 35 years” said, adding that Ungerer died at his daughter’s home. “He was an allround genius, a man who was talented in everything. He loved literature. He used to say ‘I write about what I draw and I draw what I write’,” he said. Originally from Alsace in eastern France, Ungerer lived in the United States and Canada before settling in Ireland.

He was obsessed with books from an early age. “For me, if there was a heaven it would be a library,” he told AFP in a 2016 interview, adding that he was “brought up on reading”. Ungerer’s oeuvre ranged from globally celebrated children’s books like The Three Robbers and The Moon Man to erotic drawings as well as satirical paintings and political posters. He wrote in three languages: English, French and German. He published over 140 books which have been translated into 30 languages.

‘Subversive’

Ungerer’s social activism and his often irreverent writings led to some of his work being branded “subversive” by critics. Born into a family of watchmaker­s in 1931 in the Alsatian city of Strasbourg, Ungerer lost his father when he was three-years-old. He witnessed the annexation of Alsace by Germany during World War II and the subsequent imposition of German and Nazi ideology in schools, which he recounted later in autobiogra­phical works.

After failing the second part of the baccalaure­ate exam-in a school report, his headmaster described him as a “wilfully perverse and subversive individual­ist”Ungerer hitchhiked to the North Cape in Norway. After the end of the war, Ungerer travelled across Europe and in 1956, he left for New York with 60 dollars in his pocket and what he later described as a “trunk full of drawings and manuscript­s”.

The following year, after meeting the children’s book editor Ursula Nordstrom at Harper and Row, his first children’s book The Mellops Go Flying was published and became an immediate success. A range of works followed from the complete Mellop series to several prizewinni­ng books and satirical works including Horrible and The Undergroun­d Sketchbook.

He then worked for Playboy magazine as its food editor and also did several political posters including drawings for the election campaign of former German chancellor Willy Brandt’s SPD party. Ungerer donated more than 11,000 original works of art, sculptures, books and toys to a museum devoted to his work and life, which opened in 2007 in his birthplace Strasbourg.

Since then, the Tomi Ungerer Museum has been voted as one of the ten best museums in Europe by the Council of Europe. He was awarded the Legion of Honor by France in 1990 and was elevated to Commander of the Legion of Honor in 2018. — AFP

 ??  ?? In this file photo taken on December 21, 2010 French cartoonist, artist and illustrato­r Tomi Ungerer poses in front of some of his drawings shown in an exhibition entitled “Politrics, le dessin politique de Tomi Ungerer” (Ungerer’s political drawings) at the Ungerer museum in Strasbourg, eastern France.
In this file photo taken on December 21, 2010 French cartoonist, artist and illustrato­r Tomi Ungerer poses in front of some of his drawings shown in an exhibition entitled “Politrics, le dessin politique de Tomi Ungerer” (Ungerer’s political drawings) at the Ungerer museum in Strasbourg, eastern France.
 ??  ?? In this file photo taken on October 26, 2007 French cartoonist, artist and illustrato­r Tomi Ungerer poses upon his arrival at the Tomi Ungerer’s Museum dedicated to his work, prior to its inaugurati­on in Strasbourg. — AFP photos
In this file photo taken on October 26, 2007 French cartoonist, artist and illustrato­r Tomi Ungerer poses upon his arrival at the Tomi Ungerer’s Museum dedicated to his work, prior to its inaugurati­on in Strasbourg. — AFP photos

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