Ange Zhang

Ange Zhang (Chinese: 张安戈; pinyin: Zhāng Āngē; born March 19, 1951) is a Chinese-born Canadian illustrator and animation artist.

The son of Zhang Guangnian, a famous Chinese writer, he was born in Beijing and studied at the Central Academy of Drama in China and the Banff Centre in Canada. Zhang grew up during the Cultural Revolution. He joined the Red Guard but was later sent to a farm in Shanxi province. There he discovered painting and drawing. He later worked as a set designer for the National Opera Theatre in Beijing. Zhang was working as a set designer at the Banff Centre for the Arts at the time of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. The Canadian government offered asylum to visitors from China at that time and Zhang decided to accept that offer.[1][2]

While he was working on set design for the Stratford Festival, he met Ken Nutt at a drawing class in Stratford. Nutt suggested that he try illustrating children's books. That led to him illustrating W. D. Valgardson's book Thor, which won a Mr. Christie's Book Award.[1]

He married Pingna Sheng; the couple have one son Eric.[1]

Selected work[1]

gollark: 15 minutes. You said.
gollark: The "no real cost to me now but possible large gains via belief" argument is called Pascal's wager and does not actually work.
gollark: Presumably, religious people do prayer and stuff. If they weren't religious, they could use that time for other things.
gollark: If your beliefs don't actually have *any* consequences for your actions I don't think you meaningfully believe them.
gollark: If you more accurately model reality you can more effectively achieve goals.

References


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