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With this volume, Abbeville continues its series of interactive, inquiry-based books designed to teach children about the world by looking at art, and about art by looking at the world.
See how Carmen Lomas Garza captured a family eating watermelon on the front porch; how Kikugawa Eizan used curved lines to show the grace of a mother carrying her son; and how John Singer Sargent depicted the flowerlike delicacy of two sisters as they light lanterns in a twilit summer garden.
Abbeville Kids expands its award-winning series of interactive, inquiry-based books designed to teach children about the world by looking at art, and about art by looking at the world.
Designed to teach children about the world by looking at art and about art by looking at the world. This title presents sixteen diverse works of art, all devoted to a subject that every child already knows from personal experience. It is filled with thought-provoking questions and imaginative activities.
Sixteen works of art show the many different ways a selection of great artists - from Winslow Homer and Childe Hassam to Georgia O'Keeffe and Romare Bearden - have perceived the breathtaking variety of landscapes and the diversity of people living in the four major regions of the United States.
Abbeville Kids expands its award-winning series of interactive, inquiry-based books designed to teach children about the world by looking at art, and about art by looking at the world.
Takes children to the magic and beauty of art. This series features twelve diverse works of art from around the world, centered on a theme that little ones love: Babies, Dogs, Horses, or Trains. It gives young learners different ways in which artists see the world.
This long-awaited 'little sibling' of Abbeville's bestselling How Artists See series shows preschoolers the varied and beautiful ways in which artists see the world around them.
This long-awaited "little sibling" of Abbeville's bestselling How Artists See series shows preschoolers the varied and beautiful ways in which artists see the world around them. Recommened for 2 to 6 year-olds.
This long-awaited 'little sibling' of Abbeville's bestselling How Artists See series shows preschoolers the varied and beautiful ways in which artists see the world around them.
Part of a series of books designed to teach children about the world by looking at art and about art by looking at the world, this text shows children how Franz Marc transformed an ordinary cow into a magical one by using brilliant colours, and how Roy Lichtenstein created goldfish out of metal.
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