



The Artist
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- £6.99
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- £6.99
Publisher Description
From the award-winning Ed Vere comes a joyful and inspirational celebration of beauty, mistakes and the artist in all of us
‘The Artist's optimistic ending, in particular, makes it perfect for bedtime reading and bedtime dreaming for little artists. It’s a useful reminder for grown-up artists too.’ - Art Quarterly
One brave little artist goes on one epic adventure to share her art, and in doing so learns that it doesn't matter if you colour outside the lines, that art is full of heart... and that maybe you are an artist too!
What is an artist?
Someone who sees beauty... Someone with a mind full of colours, feelings, and ideas... Someone who plays and dreams and makes...
Praise for How to be a Lion - winner of the Oscar's Book Prize
"This witty, resonant picture book is a manual for anyone's life, young or old." Sunday Times Children's Book of the Week
"Positive role models showing boys how to be a whole person are few and far between these days. This marvellous book triumphs in that essential job." Kirkus



PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
While many can be too busy to notice the wonders around them, "Artists try to see it all," proclaims Vere (Max the Brave) in this book-length answer to the question "What is an artist?" The title's budding creator protagonist, a little Godzilla-esque dinosaur covered in radiant rainbow splotches, is determined to "share her pictures with the world." She heads for the big city—pluckily sailing across a daunting ocean rendered in deep blue brushstrokes and tangles of black lines—and, much to the delight of the metropolis's inhabitants, begins covering buildings with murals that make "busy people,/ going places,/ slow down/ and look." A crisis of confidence ensues when she makes what feels like a very public mistake—coloring outside the lines. But with her fans cheering her on ("Mistakes are how you learn!" a child tells her), the artist not only recovers but is newly emboldened: "Wild and free,/ her colors fly." Accompanying earnest narration are empathically inked and colored illustrations whose format nods to an artist's notebook—some images seem to be held in place with brown drafting tape. Even if readers don't need encouragement to unleash their own talents, they should be intrigued by this protagonist's arc toward artistic assurance. Ages 3–7.