Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Dot Day: Make Your Mark

I'm thankful for the little things in life.

Like having amazing colleagues that love to work together and collaborate with their librarian.

I guess that's not really a little thing after all.

Dot Day Peter Reynolds art project collaboration


Each year my art teacher and I co-teach classes on Dot Day, which is a celebration of the book The Dot by Peter Reynolds. It's a book all about inspiring creativity in young minds.

Dot by Peter Reynolds elementary school library art


This year we hosted 1st, 2nd, and 3rd grade classes to read The Dot with us and make their own dot.

1st Grade made 3D art sculptures:

3D art sculptures first grade Dot Day Projects Peter Reynolds


2nd grade made dot flowers:

second grade made dot flowers for Dot Day in the library collaboration project


3rd grade made aluminum dots (which I somehow didn't get a pic of...)


We both look forward to Dot Day each year and seeing the creativity in our students!


Friday, August 29, 2014

This Librarian's Quick Picks: Mix It Up!

Mix It Up by Herve Tullet book coverMix It Up!
by Hervé Tullet
Chronicle Books (Sep. 16, 2014)
Picture Book

Summary:

“Tap that gray spot. Just a little, to see what happens.” Follow the directions and tap, rub, smudge, and shake to learn how different colors combine.

Why you'll love it:
  • the book’s design is effective and even intricate in the details: spatters of paint adorn the sides and corners of each white spread, adding an authenticity that readers will love
  • the text is spare yet inviting 
  • an effective presentation of basic color mixing, and great fun for paint lovers in places where paints can't be used
  • While the participatory nature may recall an app, nothing feels digital here; in fact, Tullet's paintings show paint texture so lusciously it's hard to remember that these are dry illustrations. 
Mix It Up Herve Tullet inside illustrations

Who should read it:

Great for grades PreK-1...and here's the activity kit!

What you should read next:

Monday, March 8, 2010

Books by Theme: Nonfiction Art Reads

man made out of books


Michelangelo and the Pope's Ceiling by Ross King book cover
Michelangelo and the Pope's Ceiling, Ross King's account of the four years that Michelangelo spent painting the Sistine Chapel frescoes, is a grand mix of history and biography. Readers learn about Michelangelo's problems with health and money, his difficult patron, Pope Julius II, and his rivalry with the young Raphael. King also paints a fascinating picture of 16th-century Rome, inhabited by such figures as Leonardo da Vinci, Savonarola, and Machiavelli.



Lost Painting by Jonathan Harr book coverJonathan Harr's The Lost Painting: The Quest for a Caravaggio Masterpiece traces dual paths to the The Taking of Christ. The first follows two graduate art students from Rome, the other a restorer at the National Gallery of Ireland who is assigned an old painting of unknown origin. As the story unfolds, readers are drawn deep into the world of archival research and the life of Caravaggio.
discovery of Caravaggio's


 
Lives of the Muses by Francine Prose book cover
Francine Prose explores the complex dynamics between the artist and his muse in The Lives of the Muses: Nine Women and the Artists They Inspired. In these nine profiles, she analyzes the lives of women who had the luck, or misfortune, to connect their destiny with that of a famous artist. Among the muses are Alice Liddell, the inspiration for Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland; Lou Andreas Salome, who fascinated Nietzsche, Rilke, and Freud; Gala, the wife of Salvador Dali; and John Lennon's Yoko Ono.


I was Vermeer by Frank Wynne book cover
As is the case with I Was Vermeer, some real-life stories are more fantastic than anything Hollywood can invent. That a mid-20th-century artist could create forgeries that fooled the entire art world is the extraordinary story of Dutch art forger Hans van Meegeren (1889–1947). Recognizing that very few Johannes Vermeer paintings were known in his time and that there were no known early Vermeers, Meergeren realized he could create works that could not be compared to any authenticated Vermeer. Those fakes fooled everyone—art scholars, museum curators, and Nazi Reich Marshal Hermann Göring included. Meegeren's deception was only discovered when he confessed it in court to save himself. London-based journalist and literary translator Wynne uses his journalistic skills to present a remarkable story that is part mystery, part adventure, part biography, and part courtroom drama. His thorough research and accomplished writing style bring this unique event in art history to the general public. 

What are your favorite nonfiction books about art and artists?

~ For more themed book lists, check out Listless by One Librarian's Book Reviews and Listed by Once Upon a Bookshelf ~
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