Sketches and writings from the garden + other stories
Photography courtesy of Giulio Sheaves, Chris Beetles Gallery
Sara Midda was born in Brighton, Sussex in 1951 and has drawn since early childhood. She studied at Eastbourne College of Art, then at Goldsmiths in London, before completing postgraduate studies in illustration and printmaking at St Martins School of Art, where Fritz Wegner was a particular inspiration. Her first book was published there in 1976. Her groundbreaking and bestselling In and Out of the Garden (1981) was published by Workman Publishing and established her distinctive fusion of word and image through precise observation and lettering. The book won the Victoria and Albert Museum’s Francis Williams Award in 1982 and led to a 20-year collaboration with the Japanese department store Mitsukoshi Isetan, designing a wide range of products. While living in France, her drawings and postcards evolved into South of France: A Sketchbook (1990), a scrapbook of images, photographs and handwritten texts. In 1990 she met her husband, Heinz Propper; they lived in France for many years before returning to Sussex in 2006. Sara began exhibiting in London in the late 1980s and has shown regularly at the Chris Beetles Gallery since 1991 and most recently a retrospective of her work in 2026. Her book Growing Up and Other Vices (Jonathan Cape, 1994) won the Bologna Children’s Book Fair’s Bologna Ragazzi Award in 1995.
1951 born in Brighton, Sussex, on 8 November
1981 In and Out of the Garden
1982 V&A’s Francis Williams Award for the best descriptive illustration
1982 Begins a 20 year collaboration with Toru Ando, the art director of Mitsukoshi
1990 South of France: A Sketchbook, published by Workman
1991 Begins to show work at Chris Beetles Gallery
1994 Growing Up and Other Vices, published by Jonathan Cape
1995 Growing Up and Other Vices won the Bologna Ragazzi Award
1999 Baby Book was published
2002 A is for Adultery, Angst, and Adults Only published
2008 How to Build an A
2014 A Bowl of Olives: On Food and Memory