Christoph niemann abstract sunday maurice sendak biography
Tribute to Maurice Sendak – Christoph Niemann
- When Christoph Niemann stumbled on a “Fresh Air” interview with Maurice Sendak, wild things started to transpire.
Christoph Niemann - Page 3 - The New York Times
- When Christoph Niemann stumbled on a “Fresh Air” interview with Maurice Sendak, wild things started to transpire.
Terry Gross’s Moving Maurice Sendak Interview, Illustrated by ...
- Tribute to Maurice Sendak.
The Lives They Lived: Maurice Sendak - The New York Times
An illustrated interview with Maurice Sendak – Why Evolution ...
Christoph Niemann - Wikipedia, a enciclopedia libre
| Maurice Sendak was widely considered the most important children's book artist of the 20th century, whose works wrenched the picture book out of the safe. | |
| Tribute to Maurice Sendak. | |
| Christoph Niemann (born 1970) is an illustrator, graphic designer, and children's book author. |
Sunday Sketching - Christoph Niemann
An Illustrated Talk With Maurice Sendak | The New York Times
Terry Gross’s ‘Fresh Air’ Interview With Maurice Sendak ...
- Christoph Niemann (born ) is an illustrator, graphic designer, and children's book author.
Christoph Niemann
Illustrator, graphic designer
Christoph Niemann (born 1970) is an illustrator, graphic designer, and children's book author.
Since July 2008, Niemann has been writing and illustrating The New York Times blog Abstract City, renamed Abstract Sunday in 2011, when the blog moved to The New York Times Magazine.
Personal life
He studied at the State Academy of Fine Arts in Stuttgart under Heinz Edelmann.
After finishing his studies in Germany in 1997, he moved to New York City. After 11 years in New York City, he moved to Berlin with his wife, Lisa, and their three sons.
Career
Niemann is known for his Sunday Sketches, a weekly series of humorous drawings that play with scale and position. His compositions often take objects and turn them into something unexpected, for example a red pencil into a megaphone or a splayed book into a cat's whiskers.[1]
His work has appeared on the covers of The New Yorker, Atlantic Monthly, The New Yo