Showing posts with label Picture Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Picture Books. Show all posts

Saturday, January 8, 2022

Mirskontsa (Worldbackwards)

 


Natalia Goncharova, cover for Mirskontsa (Worldbackwards) 
Authors: Aleksei Kruchenykh, Velimir Khlebnikov, Moscow, 1912

#NataliaGoncharova #lithographs#Mirskontsa #illustratedbook#AlekseiKruchenykh#VelimirKhlebnikov #Zaum #poetry #book#Handmadebook 

Saturday, August 19, 2017

Λουλουδένιες ψυχές

Ελένη Ζούζουλα, Λευκή Βιβλιοθήκη, Εκδόσεις “Τα χρονικά”, Αθήνα

Saturday, May 7, 2016

Energy Policy and the Electrification of the Whole Country.



Amir Gadzhiev, illustration for a children's book, Gouache, ink, watercolor and whitewash on paper 20.5 x 17 cm, 1930.

Monday, February 8, 2016

Guns, class war and a transvestite cat: what a new Beatrix Potter story reveals about the author




A Beatrix Potter story written more than 100 years ago is to be published for the first time, introducing a brand new character: Kitty in Boots. 
The tale, of a gun-toting cat who leads a double life, was found near-complete in an exercise book – and shows Beatrix Potter at her darkest, says Gaby Wood
Doppelgängers and transvestites, guns and gangsters, secret lives: these are not the first things that come to mind when considering the work of Beatrix Potter. Yet the creator of Peter Rabbit and Hunca-Munca once wrote a story that featured all of them. The Tale of Kitty in Boots was written just before the outbreak of the First World War but never published in Potter’s lifetime. Over 100 years later, Penguin Random House will finally release what they describe as Potter’s “24th Tale” – a book that may turn everything we think we know about her on its head.
By Gary Wood

Thursday, May 16, 2013

What Good Luck! What Bad Luck!




Fortunately
by Remy Charlip published by Scholastic, 1969.

Monday, March 11, 2013

The Cubies





The Cubies’ ABC was published in the aftermath of the celebrated Armory Show of 1913, the largest and most sensational exhibition of modern art held in the United States.  Designed to appear as little more than a children’s ABC book—where three pyramidal-shape characters take readers on a tour of the modern works included in the exhibition—the actual purpose of The Cubies’ ABC was to introduce the newest manifestations of contemporary art to the public in a humorous and highly ingeniously fashion.  Thus the letter “A” is for “Art, Archipenko and Anatomics,” “B” is for “Braque and “Beauty as Brancusi views it,” “C” is for “Color Cubistic ad libitum,” and “D” is for “Duchamp, the Deep-Dyed Deceiver,” whose Nude Descending a Staircaseis rendered in the illustration as an accordion in need of repair.  The rhyming text in the book was written by Mary Mills Lyall, and the drawings were by her husband, Earl Harvey Lyall (an architect who had studied at Amherst College, Columbia University and, for a brief period, in Paris).  When The Cubies’ ABC appeared in 1913, The Dial declared it “the oddest little color book of the season,” telling readers that “the book must be seen and read to be appreciated.”

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Little Golden Books and Domesticity



WHAT IF? by Helen and Henry Tanous, pictures by J.P. Miller



OUT OF MY WINDOW, by Alice Low, pictures by Polly Jackson. 1955




THE BRAVE LITTLE TAILOR, pictures by J.P. Miller. 1953