![]() Agent: Elizabeth Harding, Curtis Brown, Ltd. (Also, 22 artists, and not a single woman.) Best used in combination with outside resources that allow for a fuller understanding of the artwork presented. Yes, this really is the very last episode of the podcast, and Scott and Josh are here to close it down by looking at the latest and purportedly final episode of the Skywalker Saga, Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker. Join Jansen on a colorful tour of contemporary art in this new work from an acclaimed author and illustrator. Since children won’t necessarily be familiar with the artists, Zalben’s story offers an opportunity for adult-child discussions an afterword provides sketch biographies of the artists Janson imitates, although the accompanying thumbnails only show Zalben’s (Baby Shower) parodies once again, not the originals. Oh, and also Mousterpiece Cinema, the podcast whose description you're reading right now. ![]() Unlike anyone else’s.” Most of the pages, though, are devoted to sweet-tempered parodies of modern artists: Janson does mouse versions of Josef Albers, Frank Stella, Chuck Close, and many others, adding a mouse face to a Warhol can of soup and subtracting a mouse-shaped white space from a spattered Pollack. Janson the mouse, who lives in a museum, becomes an acclaimed artist by copying the styles of paintings she sees there. ![]() Janson, a mouse who looks a little like Arthur’s sister D.W., lives in a museum and paints a string of homages to modern artists before creating, on the last page, a dreamy “mousterpiece” that signals her attainment of true artist status: “he did it her own way. Introducing Modern Art to Preschoolers: Mousterpiece Posted on SeptemJane Breskin Zalben. ![]()
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