Australian children book illustrator Shaun Tan Tuesday received his Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award from the hands of Swedish Crown Princess Victoria in Stockholm Concert Hall.
“Shaun Tan is a master visual storyteller, pointing the way ahead to new possibilities for picture books,” said Larry Lempert, Chairman of the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award jury at the awarding ceremony.
“His pictorial worlds constitute a separate universe where nothing is self-evident and anything is possible. Memories of childhood and adolescence are fixed reference points, but the pictorial narrative is universal and touches everyone, regardless of age,” Lempert read at the grand awarding ceremony.
Tan said after receiving the prize that “this prize is both for children and for adult,” stressing that there is darkness in life, but if one can expose the darkness, shed light on it, the darkness can become lighter.
Tan has described immigrant children’s life in his book since he himself is a Chinese immigrant’s son.
Tan was born in 1974. His father is a Chinese immigrant and his mother is an Australian.
He has illustrated more than 20 books including The Rabbits (1998), The Lost Thing (2000), The Red Tree (2001), The Arrival ( 2006) and Tales from Outer Suburbia (2008).

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