Pablo the Artist
Publisher:
Macmillan
Publication Date:
01 February, 2006
ISBN:
9780374356873
Pages:
24
Subjects:
Juvenile fiction
Available as:
,
Trade Cloth, 978-1-4379-7774-5
Trade Cloth, 978-0-374-35687-3
Description:
Pablo the elephant has a problem. His art club is holding an exhibition, and all he has is an empty canvas. Plagued by artist's block, Pablo sets out for the country, in hopes of finding fresh ideas. But when he finishes his landscape, Pablo still isn't satisfied. It may just take the ingenuity of some friendly woodland strangers to help Pablo realize his full artistic potential. Bursting with the author's inimitable illustrations, this is an uplifting story about teamwork and artistic vision.
PW Publishers Weekly
Review Source:
Publishers Weekly
Review Date:
2006-01-30
Copyright:
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Pablo, an elephant in a pale yellow suit and brown fedora, bears little stylistic resemblance to his Spanish namesake. He belongs to the pedestrian Hoof Lane Art Club, a suburban salon whose most daring member is a zebra with a passion for parallel lines. When Pablo suffers "artist's block," he strolls to a verdant field, paints a drab picture of a tree and takes a nap. While he sleeps, passing animals rate his handiwork (a thin ink frame around each page subtly suggests a fantasy suspension of Pablo's humdrum reality). The watery grass "looks completely tasteless!" to a sheep, who tints it "a delicious bright green." "No nuts! I see no nuts!" chatters a squirrel, who hops on the sheep's back to paint dots in the branches. The animals depart just as Pablo awakens and exclaims, "What a strange dream.... Now I know exactly what to do!," and gets back to work. The finished canvas goes unseen until the last moment, when Pablo displays it at an exhibition; readers will smile at his secret helpers, silently joining the gallery throng. As in Igor, the Bird Who Couldn't Sing, Kitamura imagines a character overcoming creative limitations, and his droll double-entendre clarifies what happened: "For Pablo it was a dream come true." Kitamura illustrates in his signature choppy, shaky ink lines and saturated colors. Thanks to Pablo's furred and feathered critics, readers notice what an unobservant painter might neglect when crafting a natural landscape. Ages 4-8. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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