Books For Keeps
  • Home
  • Reviews
  • Articles
  • Past Issues
  • Latest Issue
  • Authors and Artists
  • Latest News
  • Search
  • Menu Menu

Posts

Step into the Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration

June 3, 2026/in news /by Andrea Reece

The Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration opens on Friday 5 June and becomes the world’s largest space dedicated to illustration. The BfK team had a sneak preview and can report that it is a beautiful space, very welcoming and well worth visiting.

Situated at the base of the historic Dunard Engine House, entrance is through the shop, with Deeney’s Cafe to the left. Directly ahead you will find the UK’s first dedicated public Illustration Library, a comfortable space for visitors of any age with shelves holding hundreds of books, comics, graphic novels, picture books and zines. Visitors are encouraged to try their hand at illustrating, using prompts designed by illustrator Jay Cover, with opportunities to experiment using art materials, games and toys. The space is staffed by extremely friendly volunteers.

On the floors above are two special exhibitions. These are ticketed, one ticket giving access to both. Quentin Blake: Performance has over 100 original and rarely-seen drawings showcasing the theatrical influences on the centre’s founder. Included are illustrations from opening night performances, including his depiction of Laurence Olivier’s iconic turn in The Entertainer (1957), as well as original drawings for Roald Dahl’s The Enormous Crocodile (1978), inspired by the crocodile of Victorian Punch and Judy shows.

The exhibition also features Blake’s illustrations of works by Ancient Greek, Elizabethan and modern playwrights including William

Quentin Blake in front of his drawing of Waiting for Godot in Quentin Blake Performance at the Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration

Shakespeare and Samuel Beckett, with highlights including Waiting for Godot (2021) and Aristophanes’ The Birds (1971).

Recent illustrations of characters in Macbeth as birds are on show for the first time, his distinctive scratchy line drawings offering a fresh take on the tragedy. Rarely seen preparatory material gives an insight into his working process, with illustrations for books including Angelo (1970) and Clown (1965), and cover designs for Punch magazine.

Visitors can also delve into the kaleidoscopic sometimes macabre world of British Sri Lankan multi-disciplinary artist, MURUGIAH in an exhibition of works inspired by Hollywood, sci-fi and 2000s pop punk.

Back on the ground floor, you’ll find a third exhibition, Queer as Comics. Curated by Paul Gravett, this is the first major exhibition on queer comic-making in the UK, spanning 1940s to the current day.

The Centre’s opening follows the redevelopment of a derelict 18th and 19th waterworks at New River Head in Clerkenwell, London, led by Tim Ronalds Architects. Support for the £12.5m project includes £3.75 million from The National Lottery Heritage Fund thanks to money raised by National Lottery players. Other investment includes the London Borough of Islington and support from trusts, foundations and philanthropists.

Director Lindsey Glen says, ‘This Friday we celebrate a landmark opening: a permanent national centre for an artform that is used every day, all over the world, to share stories and ideas. We are so excited to welcome our first visitors. We hope to inspire them to look at the world afresh and empower them with new creative skills and tools of their own.

‘We’re so grateful to Quentin Blake, who has tirelessly championed illustration and spearheaded this project, to the National Lottery Heritage Fund and to the philanthropists and grantmakers who have made this possible. Thank you!’

The site’s unique multifaceted history of engineering, labour, natural resources and urban development is told through interpretation panels designed by illustrator Nina Chakrabarti. Playable benches designed by experts Play Build Play provide fun for families, whilst the Studio Garden, an enclosed play surface, will be available to visiting schools and open to the public on weekends.

The Windmill Base – London’s oldest surviving windmill – will feature pop-up displays of work created by the local community in conjunction with illustrators. The first residency will be a project on ‘Exquisite Bodies’ by local refugees and migrants in collaboration with featured illustrator MURUGIAH.

Finally, there are lovely new gardens to enjoy too. Designed by Sue Amos, the gardens are designed to create a biodiverse habitat in Islington, which apparently has the UK’s second lowest proportion of green space. Perennial flowers, evergreen shrubs and trees will dot small landscaped gardens, specially chosen to thrive in the site’s dry conditions. Plants have also been selected to reference illustration, including raw materials for inks, timber for charcoal and leaves for tracing.

Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration 

1 Myddelton Passage, EC1R 1AG

Weds–Sun, 10am – 5pm.

  • Quentin Blake: Performance, 5 June 2026 – April 2027
  • MURUGIAH: Ever Feel Like…, 5 June 2026 – 31 August 2026
  • Queer as Comics, 5 June 2026 – 4 October 2026

Tickets include entry to all exhibitions on the day of your visit:  £16.50 adult / £6.60 child including donation.

Free for members. Annual membership from £45.

 

 

https://booksforkeeps.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/QBC-Performance.jpg 523 454 Andrea Reece http://booksforkeeps.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/bfklogo.png Andrea Reece2026-06-03 22:32:102026-06-04 08:41:40Step into the Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration

Quentin Blake Centre, the world’s largest space dedicated to illustration, opening 5 June

April 29, 2026/in news /by Andrea Reece

The Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration will open to the public on Friday 5 June 2026 with three exhibitions, a cafe, shop, gardens and free spaces including a Library and Creative Studio. The Centre’s opening follows the redevelopment of a derelict 18th and 19th waterworks at New River Head in Clerkenwell, London. It will be the world’s largest space dedicated to illustration.

Tickets for the Centre’s special exhibitions are on sale now. A dynamic programme of exhibitions across three gallery spaces will explore illustration in all its forms. For the first time, Performance will explore how theatrical traditions have influenced the almost 80-year career of Quentin Blake. The inaugural Quentin Blake exhibition at the Centre is a rare opportunity to see over 100 of his original works on paper, many of which have never been publicly displayed before.

Quentin’s work has often been stimulated by drama – from his early career illustrating opening night performances to accompany

Artist Quentin Blake surounded by his art at a new exhibition which opens at a new Gallery , The House of Illustration in the Kings Cross regeneration area, London.
2nd July 2014

theatre reviews, including Laurence Olivier’s iconic turn in The Entertainer (1957), to the pantomime inspiration for Roald Dahl’s The Enormous Crocodile (1978). Beyond children’s books, Quentin has illustrated the work of Ancient Greek, Elizabethan and modern playwrights including William Shakespeare and Samuel Beckett.

Seldom seen preparatory material will give an insight into Quentin’s working process. Quentin’s own works Angelo (1970) and Clown (1965) feature, as well as his illustrations from Punch magazine. One of Quentin’s most recent illustration projects will be on public display for the first time: nearly 40 depictions of Macbeth characters as birds.

Quentin Blake says, ‘Illustrating is like directing a play, except that you also get to design the scenery and play all the parts. I can’t wait for the curtain to go up on the new exhibition.’

Artistic Director Olivia Ahmad says, ‘For Quentin, a blank sheet of paper is like an empty stage, just waiting for him to draw in the scenery and the characters who will tell his stories. His unmistakable drawings are fizzing with kinetic energy and it’s no wonder that vital acrobats, mime artists and circus performers have been finding their way into his work for almost 80 years.’

The Centre will also open with Queer as Comics, a landmark exhibition depicting for the first time in the UK stories of fantasy, identity and resistance told across time by queer comic-makers. Spanning the 1940s to present day, this first major exhibition of LGBTQIA+ comic-making in the UK will feature rarely displayed original artwork from comics, strip cartoons, graphic novels and zines.

Most artworks are on display for the first time ever with over 60 artists featured, ranging from underground creators to influential icons, including Tove Jansson, David Shenton, Rupert Kinnard, Alison Bechdel and Tom of Finland. Curated by comics specialist Paul Gravett, Queer as Comics will chronicle the significance of comics for queer art and literature over the past 80 years.

Highlights include Tove Jansson’s Moomin cartoon strip for London Evening News with characters based on herself and her lesbian community. The first recurring queer-coded characters to appear in a mainstream British news publication are attributed to Jansson.

Curator Paul Gravett says, ‘Comics have a long tradition of being subversive: neither art nor literature but using both to make their messages captivate readers. Under the radar, comics lend themselves perfectly to queer themes as brilliantly showcased in the exhibition.’

 Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration

1 Myddelton Passage, EC1R 1AG

Weds–Sun, 10am – 5pm.

Quentin Blake: Performance, 5 June 2026 – May 2027

MURUGIAH: Ever Feel Like…, 5 June 2026 – 31 August 2026

Queer as Comics, 5 June 2026 – 4 October 2026

Tickets include entry to all exhibitions on the day of your visit: £16.50 adult / £6.60 child including donation.

Exhibitions are free for members. Annual membership from £45.

https://booksforkeeps.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/QBCI-C-Quentin-Blake-3002_GeneralUse_Mascot_04.png 577 650 Andrea Reece http://booksforkeeps.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/bfklogo.png Andrea Reece2026-04-29 11:12:472026-04-29 14:01:09Quentin Blake Centre, the world’s largest space dedicated to illustration, opening 5 June

Search for a specific review

Author Search

Search







Generic filters




Filter by Member Types


Book Author

Download BfK Issue Bfk 278 May 2026
Skip to an Issue:

About Us

Launched in 1980, we’ve reviewed hundreds of new children’s books each year and published articles on every aspect of writing for children.

Read More

Follow Us

Latest News

Young readers choose graphic novel as overall winner of the Children’s Book Award

June 13, 2026

My Name is Samim wins Jhalak Children’s & YA Prize

June 11, 2026

New National Literacy Trust report finds rise in some children’s reading for pleasure

June 10, 2026

Contact Us

Books for Keeps,
30 Winton Avenue,
London,
N11 2AT

Telephone: 0780 789 3369

ISSN: 0143-909X (this is our International Standard Serial Number).

© Copyright 2026 - Books For Keeps | Proudly built by Lemongrass Media Website Design
Scroll to top