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Eric Carle

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Even during wartime, Carle found ways to learn about art. ... His high school art teacher, Herr Krauss, ... It was during this time he met his first wife. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Eric Carle


1
Eric Carle
Emily Byrd Tara Riley Krista Byrne Angela
Buragilo
2
Eric Carle
  • Let's put it this way if you are a novelist, I
    think you start out with a 20 word idea, and you
    work at it and you wind up with a 200,000 word
    novel. We, picture-book people, or at least I,
    start out with 200,000 words and I reduce it to
    20.
  • Eric Carle

3
Interesting Facts
  • He does not use computers to make the actual
    book.
  • He tries to honor his fathers and recapture the
    happy memories with him by writing about small
    living things.
  • Eric Carles favorite book of the ones he has
    written is Do You Want to be My Friend?
  • He does not have a favorite color he loves them
    all and likes combination of colors better then
    an individual color.
  • He wanted to be a forester when he was younger.
  • Early 1970s he started growing his beard while
    in the hospital for two broken vertebrae.
  • He speaks English and German.

4
Biography
  • Eric Carle was born in Syracuse, New York on 1929
    and lived there until 1935. He remembers his life
    there to be a happy time, filled with lots of
    drawings.
  • Just after Carle started first grade, his family
    moved to Stuttgart, Germany, his father's
    original home. Carle grew up in Hitler's Germany
    as they were preparing for war.
  • He attended very strict schooling, but he
    received encouragement from a teacher who praised
    his drawings in class. Through his artwork, he
    quickly adapted and made friends.
  • When war came in 1939, Carles world was changed.
    His father was gone for over eight years,
    fighting the war as a member of the German army
    and consequently held as a POW. He and his family
    spent many nights in an air-raid shelter.
  • Even during wartime, Carle found ways to learn
    about art. His teachers saw potential in him,
    and taught him about the risky forms of art
    (like abstract) that the Nazis didnt approve
    of. His high school art teacher, Herr Krauss,
    influenced him greatly.
  • In 1947 Carles father returned, and Carle was
    enrolled in the fine arts academy, designing
    posters for the American information center in
    Stuttgart.
  • In 1952 Carle felt confident enough about his
    work to take his portfolio to the United States,
    but was drafted for war and taken back to
    Stuttgart. It was during this time he met his
    first wife.
  • When discharged from war, the couple moved back
    to New York and had two children.

5
Life of Eric Carle
  • In 1963 Carle quit his full-time job and began
    working as a freelance artist. He says, I had
    come to the conclusion that I didn't want to sit
    in meetings, write memos, entertain clients, and
    catch commuter trains. I simply wanted to create
    pictures.
  • In 1964 Carle and his wife split, and he met Bill
    Martin, who asked him to do illustrations for the
    childrens books he had written.
  • After working alongside Bill Martin, Carle met
    Ann Beneduce who helped him create and publish
    his first two books 1, 2, 3 to the Zoo (1968)
    and The Very Hungry Caterpillar (1969).
  • The Very Hungry Caterpillar became an immediate
    best seller, and won several awards. Today
    millions of copies have been sold, and it has
    been translated into 30 different languages.

6
Events of Eric Carle
  • In 1977 Carle introduced another new invention in
    his book The Grouchy Ladybug the pages grow in
    size as larger and larger animals appear on them.
  • Carle is well known for his very series of
    books, as well has his books that deal with
    numbers letters, the alphabet and other
    activities for young children. Some of these
    books include The Very Quiet Cricket, The Very
    Busy Spider, The Very Lonely Firefly and My Very
    First Book.
  • Carle has written many poems for young children,
    and produced many stand-alone titles that are
    educational yet fun for younger readers. Today Is
    Monday, Books for Keeps, and Little Cloud
    encourage close observation to shapes and
    changes.
  • In the years that follow Carle used his childhood
    in Germany to create several other books
    including his award-winning Draw Me a Star, his
    autobiographical My Apron A Story from My
    Childhood, and Flora and Tiger Nineteen Very
    Short Stories from My Life, which appeal to older
    children.
  • Since the new millennium Carle has published best
    sellers like Does a kangaroo Have a Mother, Too?
    and Dream Snow, for the holiday season.
  • He has worked closely with Japanese artist Kazuo
    Iwamura to create a bilingual book Where Are You
    Going? To See My Friend! which reads from left to
    right in English for the first half of the book,
    and then from right to left in transliterated
    Japanese from the back half of the book.
  • On November 22, 2002 the Eric Carle Museum of
    Picture Book Art opened in Amherst,
    Massachusetts, founded by Carle and his wife,
    Barbara.
  • In 2003 Bill Martin and Carle created a third
    bear book Panda Bear, Panda bear, What Do You
    See?

7
The themes of Eric Carles stories are usually
drawn from his extensive knowledge and love of
naturean interest shared by most small children.
Besides being beautiful and entertaining, his
books always offer the child the opportunity to
learn something about the world around them. It
is his concern for children, for their feelings
and their inquisitiveness, for their creativity
and their intellectual growth that, in addition
to his beautiful artwork, makes the reading of
his books such a stimulating and lasting
experience.
Themes
8
Concepts Eric Wants Children To Know
  • Carle says With many of my books I attempt to
    bridge the gap between the home and school. To me
    home represents, or should represent warmth,
    security, toys, holding hands, being held. School
    is a strange and new place for a child. Will it
    be a happy place? There are new people, a
    teacher, classmateswill they be friendly?
  • Eric Carle said he believes the passage from home
    to school is the second biggest trauma of
    childhood the first is, of course, being born.
    Indeed, in both cases we leave a place of warmth
    and protection for one that is unknown. The
    unknown often brings fear with it. In his books
    he tries to counteract this fear, to replace it
    with a positive message. He believes that
    children are naturally creative and eager to
    learn. He wants to show them that learning is
    really both fascinating and fun.

9
Genres
  • Eric Carle is most recognized as the picture book
    genre. What is fascinating about his books are
    that most of them are written and illustrated by
    him as well. He has won many awards for his hard
    work and dedication to the children in our
    schools.

10
What makes Eric Carles Work Distinctive?
  • Eric Carle paints on tissue paper for his
    illustrations.
  • Tissue Paper
  • After painting on the tissue paper, he uses it to
    create the characters and items in his stories.
  • Creating Pictures

11
Artistic Style Media
  • Eric Carles art is distinctive and instantly
    recognizable. His unique art work is created in
    collage style, using hand-painted papers, which
    he cuts and layers to form bright and colorful
    images. Many of his books have added effects
    including twinkling lights as in The Very Lonely
    Firefly and the lifelike sound of a cricket in
    The Very Quiet Cricket.
  • His work is also different because he uses a
    unique method for his art work. Here are
    examples
  • Makes pictures by starting with plain tissue
    paper
  • Then paints it different colors with acrylics
    using wide and small brushes or just his fingers.
  • Cuts shapes out of these colored pieces and glues
    them to an illustration board to create his
    artwork.

12
Awards
  • Silver Medal from the City of Milano, Italy, 1989
  • The 1995 David McCord Childrens Literature
    Citation, Framingham State College The Nobscot
    Reading Council of the International Reading
    Association, 1995
  • University of Southern Mississippi Medallion from
    DeGrumond Collection, University of Southern
    Mississippi, Hattisburg, MS, 1997
  • Regina Medal, Catholic Library Association, 1999
  • Outstanding Friend of Children, Pittsburgh
    Childrens Museum, 1999
  • Japan Picture Book Award, Presented by Mainichi
    Newspaper for Lifetime Achievement, 2000
  • Honorary Degree from College of Our Lady the
    Elms, Chicopee, MA, 2001
  • Officers Cross of the Order of Merit of the
    Federal Republic of Germany, 2001
  • Honorary Degree from Niagara University, Niagara,
    NY, 2002
  • Laura Ingalls Wilder Award from the Association
    for Library Service to Children, American Library
    Association, 2003

13
Eric Carles Books1967-1980
  • Written and Illustrated
  • 1968 1, 2, 3 to the Zoo
  • 1969 The Very Hungry Caterpillar
  • 1970 The Tiny Seed, Pancakes, Pancakes!
  • 1971 Do You Want to Be My Friend?
  • 1972 Walter the Baker, The Secret Birthday
    Message, The Very Long Train (Folding Book), The
    Very Long Tail (Folding Book), Roosters Off to
    See the World
  • 1973 I See a Song, Have You Seen My Cat?
  • 1974 All About Arthur, My Very First Book of
    Numbers, My Very First Book of Colors, My Very
    First Book of Shapes, My Very First Book of Words
  • 1975 The Mixed-Up Chameleon
  • 1976 Eric Carles Storybook, Seven Tales by the
    Brothers Grimm
  • 1977 The Grouchy Ladybug
  • 1978 Seven Stories by Hans Christian Andersen,
    Watch Out! A Giant!
  • 1980 Twelve Tales from Aesop
  • Illustrated
  • 1967 Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?
    Written by Bill Martin Jr.
  • 1971 The Scarecrow Clock. Written by George
    Mendoza, Feathered Ones and Furry. Written by
    Aileen Fisher, The Boastful Fisherman. Written
    by William Knowlton, Tales of the Nimipoo.
    Written by Eleanor B. Hardy
  • 1973 Do Bears Have Mothers Too? Written by
    Aileen Fisher
  • 1974 Why Noah Chose the Dove. Written by Isaac
    Bashevis Singer
  • 1975 The Hole in the Dike. Written by Norma
    Green

14
Eric Carles Books1981-1990
  • Written and Illustrated
  • 1981 The Honeybee and the Robber
  • 1982 Catch the Ball!, Lets Paint A Rainbow,
    Whats For Lunch?
  • 1984 The Very Busy Spider
  • 1986 All in a Day, My Very First Book of
    Sounds, My Very First Book of Food, My Very First
    Book of Tools, My Very First Book of Touch, My
    Very First Book of Motion, My Very First Book of
    Growth, My Very First Book of Homes, My Very
    First Book of Heads, Papa, Please Get the Moon
    for Me, All Around Us
  • 1987 A House for Hermit Crab
  • 1988 Eric Carles Treasury of Classic Stories
    for Children, The Lamb and the Butterfly
  • 1989 Animals Animals
  • 1990 The Very Quiet Cricket
  • Illustrated
  • 1982 Otter Nonsense. Written by Norton Juster
  • 1983 Chip Has Many Brothers. Written by Hans
    Baumann (Thank You, Brother Bear, 1995)
  • 1985 The Mountain that Loved a Bird. Written
    by Alice McLerran, The Greedy Python. Written by
    Richard Buckley, The Foolish Tortoise. Written
    by Richard Buckley

15
Eric Carles Books1991-2007
  • Written and Illustrated
  • 1991 Dragons Dragons
  • 1992 Draw Me a Star
  • 1993 Eric Carle Picture Writer, Today Is
    Monday
  • 1994 My Apron
  • 1995 The Very Lonely Firefly
  • 1996 The Art of Eric Carle, Little Cloud
  • 1997 Flora and Tiger 19 very short stories
    from my life, From Head to Toe
  • 1998 You Can Make a Collage A Very Simple
    How-to Book, Hello, Red Fox
  • 1999 The Very Clumsy Click Beetle
  • 2000 Dream Snow, Does A Kangaroo Have A Mother,
    Too?
  • 2002 Slowly, Slowly, Slowly, said the Sloth
  • 2003 Where Are You Going? To See My Friend!
  • 2004 Mister Seahorse
  • 2005 10 Little Rubber Ducks
  • 2007 Baby Bear, Baby Bear, What Do You See?
  • Illustrated
  • 1991 Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear?
    Written by Bill Martin Jr.
  • 2003 Panda Bear, Panda Bear, What Do You See?
    Written by Bill Martin Jr.

16
Eric Carles BooksIn Spanish
  • De la cabeza a los pies From Head to Toe
  • El grillo silencioso The Very Quiet Cricket
  • El Canguro Tiene Mamá Does A Kangaroo Have A
    Mother, Too?
  • La Araña Muy Ocupada The Very Busy Spider
  • La mariquita malhumorada The Grouchy Ladybug
  • La Oruga Muy Hambrienta The Very Hungry
    Caterpillar
  • Oso Pardo, Oso Pardo, Qué Ves Ahi? Brown Bear,
    Brown Bear, What Do You See?
  • Oso Polar, Oso Polar, Qué Es Ese Ruido? Polar
    Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear?

17
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18
Panda Bear, Panda Bear, What Do You See?Teaching
Strategies
  • Panda Bear, Panda Bear, What Do You See? is about
    different endangered species. With this book you
    could teach the students about the different
    species in this story. You could explain to the
    students that each animal has its own habitat,
    and that all the habitats are different from one
    another. Then you could put the children in
    small groups and have them create their own
    habitat for one of the animals in the story.
    This would teach them about the animal and help
    them learn ways to protect the species. Then you
    could do a follow up activity by going to the
    zoo.


19
A House for Hermit Crab
  • Hermit Crab moves out of his small shell on the
    sea floor, in search of a new house when he
    outgrows his shell. When he finds a bigger place
    he begins looking for other animals to move in
    and help him make this new shell home. A sea
    anemone agrees to move in with him and a starfish
    says he will decorate the new shell. He sees a
    snail picking up algae and asks it to move in and
    clean his house and a sea urchin is hired for
    protection. A lantern fish comes in for lighting
    and pebbles are used for a wall. Hermit lives
    happily for a while but realizes that it is
    quickly time to move again because this shell has
    also become too small. He lets a smaller crab
    move into his old shell and sets out to find a
    new home.

20
Teaching Ideas
  • Art project
  • -give students their own blank shell and let them
    decorate it with pictures from magazines and
    other art supplies similar to the collage style
    of the author
  • Science
  • -learn about different habitats of various
    animals, where and what they live in
  • -can also learn vocabulary and animals in the
    ocean (sea anemones, coral, sea urchins)

21
The Secret Birthday Message
  • In this creative and fun book, Eric Carle changes
    the way we would typically give a birthday gift.
    It starts when Tim receives a letter written in
    code, sending him on an exciting treasure hunt
    through a dark cave, an underground tunnel, and
    other strange places. When he reaches the end he
    finds a happy surprise, a puppy in a basket with
    a tag on his paw saying, Happy Birthday!
  • This childrens book was creatively written with
    cutout shapes and vivid colors that can get
    almost anyone excited about the wonderful
    adventure Tim goes on. It is an excellent book
    for elementary aged children because it gets them
    excited about reading. They have to follow the
    clues along with Tim before they can find out
    what the surprise is in the end.

22
Teaching Ideas
  • It could be implemented into a classroom because
    it introduces pattern-recognition, the matching
    of shapes, following instructions and simple map
    reading. All of these are skills a teacher could
    expand upon in an activity. This book would be a
    fun introduction to get children thinking about
    these important things and how they effect our
    daily lives.

23
Little Cloud
  • This book is very cute and entertaining for young
    children. Little Cloud cant be seen at the
    beginning of the book, but after the big clouds
    moved out of the way, Little Cloud could be
    seen. Little Cloud decided that he wanted to
    turn himself into many different things such as
    a sheep, airplane, shark, tree, rabbit, and a
    clown. Then at the end of the book, all the
    clouds came together as one big cloud and caused
    it to rain.

24
Teaching Ideas
  • There are many ways this book could be used in
    the classroom. As the teacher you could
  • Let the students do an art session where they can
    pretend that cotton balls are the clouds, and
    they get to choose what they want to make out of
    the clouds.
  • You could also do a science lesson about the
    different types of clouds, and what happens to
    the clouds when it rains.

25
References
  • http//www.ves.k12.nf.ca/Activities/Carle.htm
  • The Official Eric Carle Web Site. Eric Carle. 11
    November 2007 lthttp//www.eric-carle.com/home.html
    gt
  • http//www.eric-carle.com/faqs.html
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Carle
  • Scholastic Review of Eric Carlehttp//content.sc
    holastic.com/browse/article.jsp?id3234Key
    Biographical notes for Eric Carlehttp//www.eric
    -carle.com/bio.html
  • Biography of Eric Carlehttp//www.biography.com/s
    earch/article.do?id9238169
  • The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book
    Arthttp//www.picturebookart.org/
  • The Official Eric Carle Websitehttp//www.eric-c
    arle.com/home.html
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