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Welcome to Beyond Oz: An Online
Gallery
The artists of Beyond Oz invite you to travel over the rainbow with them:
Climb a "Kansas Mountain" and ride a tractor. Ride a train or
a riverboat. Kiss dragons good night and take a mud bath with frogs. Bike
through the fields with Little Red Riding Hood and go to Diffendoofer
School. Search for the alphabet in the world around you. It will be the
beginning of a wonderful, magical journey into the world of children’s
books.
Also
see: Beyond Oz Museum
exhibition information
History
of Children's Book Illustration
Regional children’s book illustration dates from around the beginning
of the 20th century. Kansas’s native son, John Steuart Curry began
his career as an illustrator of children’s books and magazines.
Two-time Caldecott Honors winner Jean Charlot, who worked with renowned
children’s writers Margaret Wise Brown, Joseph Krumgold, and Ann
Nolan Clark, served as director of the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center
in the 1950s. Noted Native American artist Alan Houser, who grew up in
Oklahoma, attended the Santa Fe Indian School and helped found the Native
American Institute of Art, illustrated three children’s books on
Indian topics. C. W. Anderson, much beloved for his illustrated children’s
books about horses, hailed from Nebraska, as did Rose Cecil O’Neill,
the mother of the Kewpie doll and books.
Today's
Artist
Current technologies, such as photo-offset printing, allow today’s
illustrator to work in a wider variety of media than artists of the past.
The collage work of Lane Smith and Cathryn Falwell and the beautiful color
images of many of the artists would not be possible with photo-offset
presses. In addition, artists like Eric Brace, Bob Staake, and Stephen
T. Johnson have used computers to generate their images.
Today’s
artist understands that children’s untutored eye sees all the page
has to offer, and fantastical characters by such artists as Lane Smith
and Eric Brace cavort in our galleries with the stunning pastel and acrylic
children by Thomas B. Allen, Tim Ladwig, Stephen T. Johnson, and Floyd
Cooper and with G. Brian Karas’ childlike Fred, "The Class
Artist." Concept books range from the whimsical and modern computer-generated
alphabet and counting books of Bob Staake, to the Lupine Award winning,
cut paper Turtle Splash! Countdown at the Pond, by Cathryn Falwell, to
the stunning trompe l’oeil alphabet of Stephen T. Johnson, which
won Caldecott Honors in 1996.
Enhancing
the Story Through Art
Children’s book illustrators have a difficult job. Unlike the artist
who creates a self-contained piece, the illustrator works within the constraints
of the "book." In a picture book, each illustration must respond
to the story. While the artists may interpret and add details, it is not
their job to retell a tale. At the same time, the illustrator is responsible
for enhancing the story through visual cues. The artist also needs to
layer the illustrations, so that each reading brings new visual discoveries.
Finally, the illustrator is the person who "sells" the book.
If the cover and interior illustrations don’t visually attract the
consumer, whether it be child or parent, the book remains unread! |
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Download:
PDF (564K)
Beyond Oz: Literacy Crate Curriculum
Manual
Our thanks to the following sponsors:
Exhibition
Sponsor:
Varney’s Book Store and the Children’s Book Shop
Catalogue:
Virginia and Fred Merrill
Programming:
• MetLife Foundation Museum Connections Grant
• The Heartland Arts Fund
• National Endowment for the Arts, and the Kansas Arts Commission
• The Kansas Touring Program of the Kansas Art Commission
• The Kansas Humanities Council
About
the Artists
The artists represented in Beyond Oz are united by their link to
Kansas and the region. Many were born in the area and attended schools
such as the University of Kansas or the Kansas City Art Institute
or have been associated with Hallmark Cards in Kansas City. The
work of some, like Lisa Campbell Ernst, Thomas B. Allen, Brad Sneed,
and Craig Brown, reflect the landscape of the region. Others, like
Mike Wimmer and Michael Hague have even illustrated the children’s
classic most often associated with Kansas, The Wizard of Oz.
Their accomplishments
are immense, and the exhibition includes Caldecott Honors, American
Library Association, Boston Globe-Horn Book, State Library Association,
Society of American Illustrators, and Coretta Scott King award winners.
A number of the illustrators are represented in museum collections
across the country. |
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