Barcelona Since 1988 Stanton has participated in more than 60 solo and group exhibitions and has collaborated with newspapers and magazines (his covers for the cultural section of Barcelona newspaper
La Vanguardia were awarded prizes by the ADGFAD and included in the 1992 European Illustration/Illustration Now annual), as well as with a number of Spanish and international companies. His work has received a number of design and illustration awards in Spain including: 12
Laus awards, the
Apel.les Mestres prize for children's literature and the
Junceda illustration prize from the Catalan professional illustrator's association APIC. Internationally his work has won awards or been included for publication in the
Cresta Awards, the
British Design and Art Direction Annual, and the
Type Directors Club annual. Stanton is also head of the postgraduate illustration program and professor of illustration at the EINA Art & Design School in Barcelona.
Notable works He is the author of a number of urban installations including: Palau Robert (1997–98), l'Aquàrium de Barcelona (1998), the inauguration ceremony of the
European cup final (1999) in Barcelona, the set design of the internacional concert tour "Serrat-Tarrés" of
Joan Manuel Serrat (2000), The construction wall during the building of the Agbar tower of architect
Jean Nouvel (2001), the decoration of the
Sagrada Família subway station (2002), the facade of PG45 (2006) and the parade floats of the holiday parade “Cabalgata de reyes” (2007) of the Barcelona city government.
Children's book author and illustrator As an illustrator of books for children and adults he has published more than 40 titles including collaborations with authors
Emili Teixidor, Jordi Sierra i Fabra,
Ray Bradbury, Lee Bennett Hopkins,
J. Patrick Lewis,
Naguib Mahfouz,
Juan Carlos Martín Ramos, Tomàs Garcés and
Jorge Zentner. He is the author and illustrator of “
La Gata Misha”, a series of children's books published in Spain by
Grupo SM. His work has been published and translated into English, Spanish, French, Dutch, Catalan, and Italian. ==Bibliography==