Home
Princess Arabella at the Museum - by Mylo Freeman (Hardcover)
Loading Inventory...
TARGET
Princess Arabella at the Museum - by Mylo Freeman (Hardcover)
From Cassava Republic Press
Current price: $16.49
TARGET
Princess Arabella at the Museum - by Mylo Freeman (Hardcover)
From Cassava Republic Press
Current price: $16.49
Loading Inventory...
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact TARGET
About the Book Translation of: Prinses Arabella in het museum. Book Synopsis Princess Arabella and her friends go to the museum. There are works of different artists exhibited: some are big and others are small. In some works you can lose yourself and others make you smile. Then the children want to go home. Why? Because they want to make their own work of art! Review Quotes Mylo Freemans Princess Arabella at the Museum (her sixth book about the princess) also braids the lines between inside and outside. Arabella invites her prince and princess friends to her very own museum, which from the outside looks like Frank Gehrys Guggenheim Bilbao, if it were shaped like an elephant, and from the inside feels like a tour through a brilliant childs mind. --Sabrina Orah Mark The New York Times Art appreciation from the lens of royal Black childhood--beautiful! In Freemans latest Princess Arabella book, this young Black princess gives her royal friends a tour of her very own museum. Unlike the Louvre, Princess Arabellas museum seems to attract more children than adults, features many hands-on exhibits, and displays art that relates to the princesss family. Portraits of Princess Arabella and her mother attract the attention of her regal friends because both have blue faces. Princess Ling calls this strange while Prince Jonas declares it magnificent. Princess Naomi says she recognizes Arabella as the subject of these portraits, regardless of skin color. The Worhol-esque endpapers even foreshadow this conversation, depicting Arabella with blue, red, pink, green, purple, and orange skin. And indeed, the wonderfully stylized images of Princess Arabellas unique hairdo, which Freeman creates with increasingly smaller unconnected circles that give the essence of five pigtails, make her unmistakable. Other museum exhibits include huge, colorful dotted pumpkins like Yayoi Kusamas, a giant spider that recalls Louise Bourgeois Maman, one dog inspired by Jeff Koons and another by Keith Haring, and a portrait of her parents reminiscent of Kehinde Wileys portraits of the Obamas. Docent Arabella, wearing her Mondrian-inspired dress, concludes the gathering with tasty treats and enjoys the childrens excitement for making their own amazing artwork. Like the other Princess Arabella books, this one features a cast of multicultural characters from different, though unspecified, countries. Art appreciation from the lens of royal Black childhood--beautiful! About the Author Mylo Freeman grew up in The Hague and lives in Amsterdam. She has been a full-time writer-illustrator since 1993 and has published over 50 picture books. Her debut book Potty! was awarded the Kiek Book Prize and has been translated into many languages.