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Date: 11/29/2004 8:00:00 AM PROFILE: UC EDUCATOR APPOINTED GUEST CURATOR AT MUSEUM EXHIBIT COMING TO AMHERST
The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art is “dedicated to exhibiting the best in the genre of children’s book illustration,” according to founder H. Nichols B. Clark. Henderson has devoted his career to promoting literature and accompanying artwork that positively portrays the diversity of children and teenagers. Henderson also serves on a national panel that selects outstanding African American authors and illustrators for the American Library Association’s Coretta Scott King Award. Bryan is one the recipients of the 2004 Coretta Scott King illustrator award for his book, Beautiful Blackbird.
“I was so taken by the importance of the work he was doing with the African American spirituals, or Negro spirituals, as they’re called. He was selecting and illustrating these spirituals into a book format for children, which had never been done before. He then toured the country – playing the spirituals for children and talking about their meaning,” Henderson says.
A signed mobile by Bryan – a gift to Henderson which was accompanied by Bryan’s children’s book, Beautiful Blackbird – is featured in the Susan Cacini Children’s Library, located in UC’s Arlitt Child and Family Research and Education Center. Henderson will be selecting pieces for the exhibit from more than 30 books that Bryan illustrated for children, as well as other creations such as Bryan’s personal portraits of his family and his handmade puppets, two-to-four-feet tall, which feature Bryan’s finds of shells, sticks, nuts, sea glass and even pieces of old clothing. The puppets are prominently displayed through Bryan’s home. “Rather than open the exhibit with a formal lecture on Ashley’s work, I will interview him on stage, accompanied by slides of his work,” says Henderson. “One of the things that I do and that I insist upon when I teach children’s literature is that it must adhere to literary standards, like all literature,” Henderson says. “It cannot be demeaning. It must adhere to artistic as well as literary merits. Ashley Bryan’s books exemplify these high standards. So, when you have a book that meets these literary and artistic standards, it isn’t hard to demonstrate why children will be attracted to it.”
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