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Katie Meets The Impressionists (Scholastic Bookshelf)

Katie Meets The Impressionists (Scholastic Bookshelf)
By James Mayhew

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Product Description

"This British import pays joyful homage to the world of the Impressionists. When Katie and her grandmother visit an art museum to celebrate the elder's birthday, the girl wanders into a gallery where she admires Claude Monet's The Luncheon.... With a blink of her eyes, Katie is magically transported into the painting... Lovely watercolors emulate the style of the Impressionists... Not only does this delightful fantasy succeed as art education, but it's a charming story as well." --School Library Journal


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #100028 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-05-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 32 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
On Grandma's birthday, Katie goes with her to a museum and encounters some of the subjects in five paintings: two each by Monet and Renoir and one by Degas. She closes her eyes in front of one painting and opens them to find she's a guest in Monet's The Luncheon. There she gathers flowers for a birthday bouquet to give Grandma, but they don't fare too well on the crossing back into the museum. Next, her mission whisks her into three more works of art, including Renoir's Her First Evening Out, where the girl inadvertently wanders onstage during a performance by, as the artwork soon reveals, Degas's ballet dancers. Though Mayhew (Koshka's Tales) offers a breezy introduction to this school of painting, the book's duplication of works by two artists limits the scope of the lesson. Mayhew's softly focused watercolors approach the precious and his renditions of the characters frolicking through the fields present a jarring juxtaposition to the subjects represented in the original works (reproduced here on the museum walls). Ages 4-7.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal
PreSchool-Grade 2-This British import pays joyful homage to the world of the Impressionists. When Katie and her grandmother visit an art museum to celebrate the elder's birthday, the girl wanders into a gallery where she admires Claude Monet's The Luncheon. The garden in the painting is filled with flowers that she is sure her grandmother would love. With a blink of her eyes, Katie is magically transported into the painting. There she meets Monet's son, Jean, along with his mother and nanny. The characters in the scene are nonchalant about the girl's arrival and Jean helps her gather un bouquet, then treats her to a tour of his father's studio. Katie hops out of the picture as facilely as she entered it. Still seeking the perfect posies for Grandma, she ventures into other paintings. Katie achieves her final triumph as she wanders onto a stage filled with Degas's dancers, where she is showered with flowers by an enthusiastic audience. Arms overflowing with blossoms, she returns to the museum to find her grandma. Lovely watercolors emulate the style of the Impressionists but with a more childlike slant. This technique of juxtaposing the masterpieces with more naive versions effectively conveys the transitions in the story line. Not only does this delightful fantasy succeed as art education, but it's a charming story as well.
Rosalyn Pierini, San Luis Obispo City-County Library, CA
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Ages 4^-7. It is Grandma's birthday, and young Katie is celebrating the occasion with her at the art museum. As Grandma explains the impressionists' technique displayed in the paintings around them, Katie wanders off to admire the flowers Monet painted in The Luncheon. Closing her eyes and sniffing as though she could actually smell them, Katie wishes she had such lovely flowers to give Grandma for her birthday. When she opens her eyes, Katie finds herself in the picture, conversing with young Jean Monet, the painter's son. Katie begins wandering in and out of other classic impressionist works in search of more flowers. She even dances across the stage in Renoir's Her First Evening Out. Katie's impromptu ballet is applauded by the audience, which tosses flowers of appreciation on the stage. Gathering the blossoms into a bouquet, Katie exits the stage through Degas' The Blue Dancers and crawls over the picture frame to return to the museum and give the flowers to Grandma. Imitating the masters' daubing style in his colorful illustrations, Mayhew creates an innovative adventure. His lighthearted approach to art appreciation will whet the appetites of youngsters preparing to visit an art museum for the first time. Ellen Mandel


Customer Reviews

Katie Meets the Impressionists5
We discovered this book at the D'Orsay Museum and our son immediately loved it. We also found that it was a wonderful tool to draw in a child such as our nephew that has learning difficulties & an attention deficit. Both children enjoyed the artwork and discussing museum etiquette. We were so impressed with this book that we purchased the other two in the series at the Lourve!

a sweet, & educational tour of the masters of impressionism5
For her birthday, Katie's grandmother takes her to the museum to see the impressionist paintings. At first, Katie thinks they look like dots, but her grandmother tells her to stand further back to see the flowers and the people. Katie has a rich imagination. She steps back and not only can she see the flowers, she can smell them. She closes her eyes and she finds herself within the painting itself, interacting with Jean Monet, son of Claude Monet, who is one of the subjects in the painting.

Katie picks flowers for her grandmother and enters one painting after another, meeting different artists and interacting with the various subjects. She is chased by bees that follow her into the museum, but her overall experience is one of adventure.

Katie and her grandmother are whimsical impressionistic drawings themselves, and in the museum are photos of the actual works of Monet, Renoir and Degas.

The book also tells readers the names and dates of the paintings and in what museums they are seen today.

This is not only a great book to introduce children into art, but also a great exercise for the imagination - picturing yourself escaping into a painting and meeting new people. It is a great book for parents to read to their kids or for children to read on their own.

A Delightful Introduction to Impressionism4
This colorful book will catch the curiosity of many early elementary children. Asking children to "jump into the picture" is a tried and true technique for developing and interest in and love for art. This book succeeds in using this technique admirably! Fun for any adult who has an interest in Impressionism as well!