GREENWICH, CONN.- The Bruce Museum offers a new adventure into the world of animals with the exhibition Wild Reading: Animals in Childrens Book Art. Through more than thirty contemporary and historic illustrations, the show explores the colorful lives of wild animals, both realistic and exaggerated. Original works by artists such as Quentin Blake (illustrator of books by Roald Dahl and others), Eric Carle, Wendell Minor, Maurice Sendak and others demonstrate the wide range of styles and visual elements used in childrens literature from color, line, and shape to texture and composition.
A highlight of this exhibition is taxidermy specimens including a fox, groundhog, rabbit, chipmunk, squirrel, raccoon, birds, and insects from the Museums natural history collection, which has been paired with their illustrated counterparts. Comparisons drawn between the illustrations and specimens address the characteristics that make each animal unique and the artistic techniques used to emphasize these features. For example, a mounted gray wolf has been matched with John Hassalls original 1926 drawing of Little Red Riding Hood and the Big Bad Wolf from Mother Goose's Book of Nursery Stories, Rhymes and Fables, while the Museums black bear associates with.Fred Banberys Paddington Bear and more naturalistic illustrations by Jeannie Brett and Carin Berger.
An accompanying family gallery guide and family day fosters exciting cross-generational experiences for Museum visitors of all ages.
Wild Reading: Animals in Childrens Book Art, which is curated by Bruce Museum staff members Kathleen Holko and Mia Laufer, will be on view at the Bruce Museum in Greenwich, Connecticut, through July 3, 2016.