|

MICHAEL
SALMON
Michael was born in New Zealand and has been
involved in Children's
literature, graphics, and Theatre since 1967.
He started
his career with surfing cartoons and exhibitions of his psychedelic
art
in the late sixties. He joined the famous
marionette troupe 'The Tintookies' as a trainee set
designer/stage manager in 1968 (The Australian Elizabethan
Theatre Trust). Since then his work has been solely for young people … both
here in and overseas. His many credits include his ‘Alexander
Bunyip show’ (ABC TV 1978-88), pantomimes, fabric and varied
merchandise designs, CD ROMs, toy and board game invention and
the writing and illustrating of over 140 books for young readers.
  
Michael has been extensively touring Australian Schools since
1975, his hour-long interactive sessions are lots of fun, with
lightning fast cartoons, caricatures, silly prizes and general
encouragement for students to develop their own creativity.
Many of these school visits can be seen on his web
site.
Recent trips have been up to the Gulf of Carpentaria Savannah
Schools and to the remote Aboriginal community Schools on Cape
York Peninsula as a guest of EDU QLD.
Michael
has been actively involved in the promotion of the Life Education
programme and invented ‘Buddy
Bear’ for
the Alannah and Madeline (Anti-bullying) Foundation in Victoria. The
Australian Government honoured his work in 2004 by printing
a 32nd Centenary, special edition of his first book The
Monster that ate Canberra as a Commonwealth Publication. Every Federal
Politician received a copy!
  
| Michael
likes to talk to large groups of combined Primary students
from K - 6 (even parents and pre-school siblings if they want
to be there as well). He can also present, as an addendum to
his regular sessions, a ‘Make a Monster book’ workshop. |
 |
 |
Comments
from schools he has visited:
'You kept
the Prep to Year 6 boys enthralled for an hour, and that's quite
an amazing feat,
for anyone ... Some
classes have
been compiling their own storyboards with some very
funny results.' The humour, information, theatre and sketches
that were all
ingredients of your show, made them so very entertaining
for the children ... the caricatures you sketched of
children were
put on display in the library windows and I had to
go and wash the windows of fingerprints from enthusiastic
children
pointing
to their favourite drawing.'
Click here for
a print-friendly version of this page

|