Holly Meade | |
---|---|
Born | Winchester, Massachusetts, U.S. | September 14, 1956
Died | June 28, 2013 56) | (aged
Occupation |
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Education | Rhode Island School of Design (AB) |
Children | 2 |
Holly Meade (b. Winchester, Massachusetts, September 14, 1956 - d. June 28, 2013) was an American artist best known for her woodblock prints and for her illustrations for children's picture books. [1] [2]
Meade's illustrations for Hush!: A Thai Lullaby (1996, Orchard Books,) by Minfong Ho won a 1997 Caldecott Honor for illustration. [3]
John Willy and Freddy McGee (Marshall Cavendish, 1998,) which Meade both wrote and illustrated, was an honoree for the Charlotte Zolotow Award for Creative Writing. [1]
Meade was the daughter of Russell and Joanne Meade of Winchester, Massachusetts. She earned her A.B. from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1978. [1] She lived in Sedgwick, Maine and had two children, Jenny and Noah Smick. [1] [4] [5]
Meade worked in "drawing, collage, printmaking, basket making, and fabric design." [1] In 1992, she illustrated her first of many children's picture books, an endeavor that she called "the other focus of my work life". [1] She began to work in woodblock printing in 2002, following a workshop with printmaker Hester Stinnett at the Haystack Mountain School. [1] [6] Some of her prints are in the permanent collection of the Portland Museum of Art. [6]
Woodblock prints illustrate some of her later picture books, including David Elliott’s series that includes On the Farm (Candlewick, 2008), In the Wild (2010) and In the Sea (2012). [1]
She used torn paper to illustrate the 1997 book Cocoa Ice, which was given a Lupine Award by the Maine Library Association. Meade describe the challenge of illustrating the parallel story with, "pictures where a tropical place and warm palette must go hand in hand with a bare landscape and cool palette." [7]
Her book John Willy and Freddy McGee was a 1999 Charlotte Zolotow Award Honor Book. [8]
The follow is a selection of some of the works Meade published. [9]
2001 A Place to Sleep
2001 The Rabbit's Bride by the Brother's Grimm
2003 John Willy and Freddy McGee
2005 Inside, Inside, Inside
1996 Hush!: A Thai Lullaby by Minfong Ho
1997 Cocoa Ice by Diana Appelbaum
2004 Blue Bowl Down by C. M. Millen
2004 Peek!: A Thai Hide-and-Seek by Minfong Ho
2005 Hop! by Phyllis Root
2005 Quack! by Phyllis Root
2005 Rata-Pata-Scata-Fata: A Caribbean Story by Phillis Gershator
2007 Sky Sweeper by Phillis Gershator
2007 Virginnie's Hat by Dori Chacaonas
2008 On the Farm by David Elliott
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Mary Azarian is an American woodcut artist and children's book illustrator. She won the 1999 Caldecott Medal for U.S. picture book illustration, recognizing Snowflake Bentley by Jacqueline Briggs Martin. It tells about the life of Wilson Bentley. She lives in Calais, Vermont. She produces original prints and has illustrated over 50 books.
Minfong Ho is a Chinese–American writer. Her works frequently deal with the lives of people living in poverty in Southeast Asian countries. Despite being fiction, her stories are always set against the backdrop of real events, such as the student movement in Thailand in the 1970s and the Cambodian refugee problem with the collapse of the Khmer Rouge regime at the turn of the 1970s and 1980s. Her simple yet touching language and her optimistic themes have made her writing popular among children as well as young adults.
Charlotte Zolotow was an American writer, poet, editor, and publisher of many books for children. She wrote about 70 picture book texts.
Kitten's First Full Moon is an American children's picture book written and illustrated by Kevin Henkes. Published in 2004, the book tells the story of a kitten who thinks the moon is a bowl of milk and tries many different attempts to drink it. Henkes won the 2005 Caldecott Medal for his illustrations. The book is in black and white and typeset in sans-serif. The idea came from a line in another book by Henkes, "The cat thought the moon was a bowl of milk." Henkes gradually expanded on that for Kitten's First Full Moon.
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Kurt Wiese was a German-born book illustrator, who wrote and illustrated 20 children's books and illustrated another 300 for other authors.
Edmund Evans was an English wood-engraver and colour printer during the Victorian era. He specialized in full-colour printing, a technique which, in part because of his work, became popular in the mid-19th century. He employed and collaborated with illustrators such as Walter Crane, Randolph Caldecott, Kate Greenaway and Richard Doyle to produce what are now considered to be classic children's books. Little is known about his life, although he wrote a short autobiography before his death in 1905 in which he described his life as a printer in Victorian London.
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Marla Frazee is an American author and illustrator of children's literature. She has received three Caldecott Honors for picture book illustration.
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Cocoa Ice is a 1997 illustrated children's picture book by Diana Appelbaum, illustrated by Holly Meade. It was first published by Orchard Books.
Hush!: A Thai Lullaby is a 1996 illustrated children's book by Minfong Ho, illustrated by Holly Meade. It won a 1997 Caldecott Honor for Meade's illustrations.
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