Marten Toonder
Marten Toonder | |
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Born | 2 May 1912 Rotterdam, Netherlands |
Died | 27 July 2005 Laren, Netherlands | (aged 93)
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | Dutch |
Genre | Graphic novels |
Spouse | Phiny Dick |
Marten Toonder (2 May 1912 – 27 July 2005) was a Dutch comic strip creator, born in Rotterdam. He was probably the most successful comic artist in the Netherlands and had a great influence on the Dutch language by introducing new words and expressions.[1][2] He is most famous for his series Tom Puss and Panda.
Tom Puss/Oliver B. Bumble series
[edit]In 1931 after his final exams, Marten Toonder went to Buenos Aires with his father. Here he got acquainted with the work of the well-known Argentine artist and editor Dante Quinterno, who ran a studio producing comics. Quinterno's creations impressed him to such a degree that he decided to become an artist himself. His most famous comic series were the Tom Puss (Tom Poes in Dutch) and Oliver B. Bumble (Olivier B. Bommel in Dutch) series that appeared in a Dutch newspaper from 1941–86. It has a very characteristic format. Every day there were three drawings and an accompanying text (about a book-page long). It started out as a children's cartoon, but gradually became more relevant to adults. Nowadays his texts are considered literature by some critics, and Toonder received several literary prizes for them. He invented many new words and expressions and some of those are now widely used in the Dutch language. Many personalities in his comics have their own peculiar dialect of Dutch, for instance Prlwytzkofsky language of professor Prlwytzkofsky, an innovative mixture of Dutch and German. Due to this emphasis on language play, Toonder's work is difficult to translate. His drawing style is very detailed and might be compared to Pogo, with more room for background drawings, since there are no text balloons in the drawings. Apart from his eccentric use of language Toonder is also praised for satirical approach.
Personal details
[edit]Toonder was born in Rotterdam on 2 May 1912. He lived in Ireland from 1965[3] until the early 1990s. He was married to the cartoon artist Phiny Dick (1912–1990),[4] who collaborated with her husband and on whose earlier created characters Ollie B Bumble and Tom Puss were based.[5] In 1996, at the age of 84, he married the composer Tera de Marez Oyens, who died the same year.[6] Together with his brother, author Jan Gerhard Toonder , he assisted his father, (Captain) Marten Toonder Sr., a seaman born in the Dutch northern province Groningen, to write a book[7] about his life, in which Toonder Sr. describes many details about the closing era of professional cargo sailing, the Rotterdam Lloyd (Line to East Indies), the Holland America Line, and about pre-war Rotterdam.
Marten Toonder died in his sleep on 27 July 2005.[8]
The Marten Toonder Prize (award of the 'Stichting Fonds voor Beeldende kunsten, Vormgeving en Bouwkunst') was an oeuvre prize awarded from 2009 to 2013 to a cartoonist who had made a contribution to Dutch culture. An amount of € 25,000 was attached to the prize.
Bibliography in Dutch language
[edit]Tom Puss/Oliver B. Bumble series
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(Cock-song), poems by Querelijn Xaverius, Marquis of Barneveldt, compiled by M. Toonder"
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(Winged years), poems by Querelijn Xaverius, Marquis of Barneveldt, compiled by M. Toonder |
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Autobiographical material
[edit]- Vroeger was de aarde plat (1992). Amsterdam: De Bezige Bij. ISBN 90-234-3258-4.
- Het geluid van bloemen (1993). Amsterdam: De Bezige Bij. ISBN 90-234-3330-0.
- Onder het kollende meer Doo (1996). Amsterdam: De Bezige Bij. ISBN 90-234-3562-1.
- Tera (1998). Amsterdam: De Bezige Bij. ISBN 90-234-3825-6.
- We zullen wel zien (2001). Amsterdam: De Bezige Bij. ISBN 90-234-6241-6.
Biography
[edit]- Wim Hazeu: Marten Toonder Biografie (2012). Amsterdam: De Bezige Bij. ISBN 978-90-234-7318-3.
Awards
[edit]- 1982: Stripschapprijs, Netherlands
- 1992: Tollensprijs, Netherlands
- 1997: Adamson Gold Award for Lifetime Achievement, Sweden
References
[edit]- ^ "Marten Toonder (1912-2005) - Koninklijke Bibliotheek". www.kb.nl.
- ^ Marten Toonder died [Wis[s]e Words
- ^ Toonder, Marten (1992). Vroeger was de aarde plat. De Bezige Bij. p. 334 and rear cover. ISBN 90-234-3258-4.
- ^ Toonder, Marten (1992). Vroeger was de aarde plat. De Bezige Bij. p. 213. ISBN 90-234-3258-4.
- ^ Toonder M. (1993) Het geluid van bloemen (autobiography part II, 1939–1945) ISBN 90-234-3330-0, p. 70
- ^ Toonder, Marten (1998). Tera. De Bezige Bij. pp. 7–12, 59 and rear cover. ISBN 90-234-3825-6.
- ^ Klei en zout water (Clay and salt water), Cpt. M. Toonder Sr., 1955, Unieboek N.V. Bussum, Netherlands.
- ^ "Marten Toonder overleden" (in Dutch). NU.nl. July 27, 2005. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Marten Toonder at Wikimedia Commons
- Biography
- Toondertijd A Dutch site for collectors of Marten Toonders stories
- Bommelzolder The one and only Toonder museum
- Panda and the clocktower fight One of Toonder's Panda stories (in Norwegian)
- Marten Toonder
- 1912 births
- 2005 deaths
- Dutch comics artists
- Dutch comics writers
- Dutch comic strip cartoonists
- Dutch illustrators
- Dutch male writers
- Artists from Rotterdam
- Dutch animators
- Dutch animated film producers
- Dutch humorists
- Dutch expatriates in Ireland
- Dutch sailors
- Dutch satirists
- Writers from Rotterdam
- Winners of the Stripschapsprijs