During the 1960s, Blake taught English at the
Lycée Français de Londres which cemented his long association with France and culminated in the award of the
Legion of Honour. He taught at the
Royal College of Art for over 20 years, where he was head of the Illustration department from 1978 to 1986. The first book Blake illustrated was
The Wonderful Button by
Evan Hunter, published by Abelard-Schuman in 1961. In his subsequent career, Blake gained a reputation as a loyal, reliable and humorous illustrator of more than 300
children's books, including some written by
Joan Aiken,
Elizabeth Bowen,
Sylvia Plath,
Roald Dahl,
Nils-Olof Franzén,
William Steig, and
Dr. Seuss. He illustrated the first Seuss book that Seuss did not illustrate himself,
Great Day for Up! (1974). By 2006, Blake had illustrated 323 books, of which he had written 35 and Dahl had written 18. He is patron of the Blake Society,
Downing College's arts and humanities society. Blake is also a patron of "The
Big Draw", which aims to get people drawing throughout the United Kingdom, and of The Nightingale Project, a charity that provides art to hospitals. Since 2006, he has produced work for several hospitals and mental health centres in the London area, a children's hospital (
Hopital Armand Trousseau) in Paris, and a maternity hospital in Angers, France. These projects are detailed in Blake's 2012 book
Quentin Blake: Beyond the Page, which describes how, in his seventies, his work has increasingly appeared outside the pages of books, in public places such as hospitals, theatre foyers, galleries and museums. In 2007, Blake designed a huge mural on fabric, suspended over and thus disguising a ramshackle building immediately opposite an entrance to
St Pancras railway station. The rendering of an "imaginary welcoming committee" greets passengers arriving on the
Eurostar high-speed railway. Blake is a supporter of and ambassador for the indigenous rights NGO
Survival International. In 2009, he said, "For me, Survival is important for two reasons; one is that I think right that we should give help and support to people who are threatened by the rapacious industrial society we have created; and the other that, more generally, it gives an important signal about how we all ought to be looking after the world. Its message is the most fundamental of any charity I'm connected with." Blake is the Founding Trustee of
House of Illustration, a centre in London for exhibitions, educational events and activities related to the art of illustration. He was also the subject of the first exhibition at this venue, entitled Inside Stories", which opened in July 2014. In August 2020, it was announced that the centre will be relocating to the 18th century Engine House at
New River Head in the
Clerkenwell area of London and will be renamed the
Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration. Besides children's books, Blake is also the designer of Ben, the logo of the shop chain
Ben's Cookies. He designed several illustrations for the story time segments for the Scottish TV series
Squeak!. In 2023, Blake was asked by
Blue Peter to design a new
Blue Peter badge which they have called their Book badge. ==Personal life==