TRIBUTES have been paid to John Burningham, the Farnham-born author and illustrator of countless much-loved children’s books, including Mr Gumpy’s Outing, Avocado Baby, and Borka.

He died on January 4, aged 82, and he is survived by his wife, the illustrator Helen Oxenbury, their children Lucy, Bill and Emily, and seven grandchildren.

John was born on April 27, 1936, in Farnham, and in his youth attended various progressive schools including Summerhill in Suffolk. He was awarded his school certificate in English literature, but failed other subjects, including somewhat ironically art.

John registered as a conscientious objector in 1954 and spent two years doing alternative military service before beginning a course in design and illustration at the Central School of Arts. There he met Helen Oxenbury, who was studying theatre design.

He travelled widely, designed iconic posters for London Transport and taught illustration part time before publishing his first picture book, Borka, the Adventure of a Goose With No Feathers, with Jonathan Cape in 1963, winning the Kate Greenaway Medal for Illustration. This began an unbroken life of picture-book creation – John then went on to create more than 70 books published in many countries around the world.

Part of a generation of illustrators who revolutionised the picture-book world, John’s career was filled with exploration, innovation and irreverence. He illustrated Ian Fleming’s Chitty Chitty Bang Bang in 1964, and in 1970 introduced the world to Mr Gumpy in Mr Gumpy’s Outing, his second Kate Greenaway Medal-winner.

In 1972, after having completed his own 80-day circumnavigation of the globe, his work on the centenary edition of Around in the World in Eighty Days was published. In the coming years he was awarded the New York Times Best Illustrated Children’s Book of the Year Award twice, the Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis and the Kurt Maschler Award, among many global accolades.

In 2018, John was awarded the Booktrust Lifetime Achievement Award, which Helen won at the same time. On receiving the award, John commented: “I’m incredibly grateful to be given an award for a lifetime of work. I’m so very flattered when I hear people now say they love my books and that something I did 50 years ago still works and is enjoyed by their family.”

John’s influence on the children’s book world has been reflected in the outpouring of love and admiration for him throughout his career and when news of his death was announced. John’s final picture book, Mr Gumpy’s Rhino, will be published this August.

His family said in a statement: “We feel we’ve lost a truly wonderful and original husband, father and grandfather, who inspired us, surprised us, and exasperated us in equal measure.”

Helen Oxenbury, John’s wife of 54 years, added: “John was a gargantuan character who played a huge part in my life and in the lives of our children and grandchildren, as he did in the lives of children all over the world, with his wonderful stories and his insight into a child’s mind. I don’t know what I would have done if I hadn’t met John. He’s guided me, influenced me and inspired me my entire life.”

Francesca Dow, managing director of publishers Penguin Random House Children’s, said: “John was a true original, a picture-book pioneer and an endlessly inventive creator of stories that could be by turns hilarious and comforting, shocking and playful. He never spoke down to children, always treating them with the utmost respect.

“John will be much missed by his publishing family here at Penguin Random House, and our thoughts and very best wishes are with Helen and his family.”