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Talking With Tebe: Clementine Hunter, Memory…
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Talking With Tebe: Clementine Hunter, Memory Artist (edição: 1998)

de Mary E. Lyons

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285837,453 (4.29)Nenhum(a)
Born in northwest Louisiana in 1886. Called Tebé by her family, Hunter lived and worked on Melrose Plantation for more than 75 years. In colors as bright as the Louisiana sky, she shows the backbreaking work required to pick cotton, gather figs, cut sugar cane, and harvest pecans. Tebé's art portrays the good times, too. Scenes of baptisms, weddings, and church socials celebrate a rich community life that helped the workers survive. Hunter's work holds a special place in art history. She was the first self-taught artist to receive a fellowship from the Rosenwald Fund, in 1945, and the first self-taught African-American woman artist to receive national media attention. Between 1945 and 1987, over fifty museums and galleries showed her works. Some writers have called Clementine Hunter a creative genius. To others she was not a real artist but a "plantation Negro." Many were surprised that an older woman with no training could produce art at all. Now considered one of the finest folk arti… (mais)
Membro:fonsecaelib530A
Título:Talking With Tebe: Clementine Hunter, Memory Artist
Autores:Mary E. Lyons
Informação:Houghton Mifflin Books for Children (1998), Edition: Library Binding, Hardcover, 48 pages
Coleções:Sua biblioteca
Avaliação:*****
Etiquetas:Art, Biography, ELIB 530A

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Talking With Tebe: Clementine Hunter, Memory Artist de Clementine Hunter

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Exibindo 5 de 5
Although a lengthy 48 pages, Talking with Tebe sheds light into Clementine Hunter' life. She lived an optimistic life and much later did quite well for herself despite her being a slave. She eventually became a house maid/cook for a rich couple who later began endorsing her art. Her paintings were very personal and depicted various aspects of her life. She painted on literally anything she could get her hands on--from random wood to the side of a milk jug. This book captivated me, so it held my attention. Something I really liked about this book is that it's told from Tebe's perspective as if she was talking. I almost heard her talking because the grammar and accent was so descriptive; it gave it an authenticity which made this book more special. I thought she was humble, and I thought she was mean in the funniest way. She explained how she once told some white, barefoot rednecks that Clementine Hunter lived down the road a way just because she didn't want them to see her art! Ha! I don't recommend this book for children because there are a few instances where there's a tragedy and she sounds so nonchalant and apathetic about it. Who wouldn't show sympathy for a baby burning in a crib fire?! Maybe she was more immune to sad events given her and her people's life conditions. Anyway, I actually liked this book and found great interest in her life. ( )
  SavanaCampbell | Jan 31, 2018 |
Hunter, C., & Lyons, M. E. (1998). Talking with Tebé: Clementine Hunter, memory artist. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin.
Grades 4 through 6
Clementine Hunter, or Tebé as her family called her, lived a long life marked by poverty and hard work. In her paintings, however, Hunter portrayed her tough existence in bright, beautiful colors that did not seek to hide her plight but instead to acknowledge and honor it. Hunter lived her whole life in Louisiana and worked at the Melrose plantation for over 70 years. She picked cotton and pecans, married twice, and gave birth to seven children—two stillborn. She started painting after being given old tubes of paint to throw away. Instead, she kept them; she took them to her cabin and painted her first picture on a shoebox top. She was a prolific artist—a title she never embraced—and painted until she died at the age of 101.

Talking with Tebé is an autobiography that Clementine Hunter never intended to write. Mary E. Lyons compiled magazine and newspaper articles and many interviews with Hunter to create a biography told in Hunter’s own words. Lyons organizes Hunter’s accounts into chronological and thematic order to create short chapters illustrated by pictures and the artist’s own art. By keeping Hunter’s Creole accent and remaining faithful to her language, infused with the grammar characteristic of West African languages, Lyons allows Hunter’s self to come through to the audience. What readers hear as they read Hunter’s patchwork of words is a powerful story about family, pride, tenacity, and art from a woman whose main purpose in life was to live with dignity. Lyons does an exceptional job in reconstruction Hunter’s life from articles and interviews, creating an authentic and accurate picture of her subject. Talking with Tebé: Clementine Hunter, memory artist is a great addition to any classroom and school library. Children will see in Hunter someone whose indomitable spirit carried her through a tough but fulfilling life. The biography lends itself well to discussions about the origin and value of art, language, social inequality, and the power of one person’s spirit. ( )
  fonsecaelib530A | Dec 8, 2011 |
Clementine Hunter should be an inspiration to young readers. She found something that she was passionate about, and was lucky enough to become famous from it. One thing that is evident from her writing, though, is that she painted because it helped her work through situations in her life. She did not paint for the fame or money.

I would include this in any unit on Louisiana artists, folk art, women's history, and African American history. Hunter's art is a treasure, but her passion is what really shines through in this book. ( )
  Kathdavis54 | Nov 17, 2011 |
In Clementine Hunter's own words, readers learn about the hardships the self-taught artist underwent as a slave at Melrose Plantation as well as the art she created to overcome them. ( )
  theCajunLibrarian | Jul 23, 2011 |
Colorful pictures and information from the artist herself about the paintings. It's the type of book that makes one want to learn more about the artist and her life. ( )
  kthomp25 | Oct 5, 2010 |
Exibindo 5 de 5
CCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices, 1998)
Clementine Hunter was a sharp, dynamic, talented artist who lived to be 101. In all those years, Clementine, or Tebé (TEE-bay), as her family called her, never moved from the Cane River region of Louisiana where she was born. Indeed, she rarely even traveled out of the area. But her paintings are in collections across the country, praised for their honest, unsentimental depiction of African American life in the rural south, where, years after the Civil War, many blacks, Tebé included, labored long, hard days year-in and year-out on plantations for wages that would never let them know a life beyond poverty. It is Tebé's own distinctive voice, dancing with expression, that relates the story of her life and her art in this stunning book edited by Mary E. Lyons that includes numerous color reproductions of Tebé's vibrant folk-art paintings. Lyons gathered quotations from magazines, newspapers, and taped interviews to piece together these commentaries by the self-taught artist who had almost no formal schooling, could neither read nor write, but whose head was filled with images that would not leave her alone until she had turned them into pictures. Tebé depicted the harsh life of labor, picking cotton in the fields, cutting cane, gathering figs, and also the ways in which the African American community came together in celebration and mourning, or relaxed in their precious times of leisure. Her paintings were done at the end of long days of work as field laborer or house cook, and even after her fame begin to grow she did not make a living from her art and worried about keeping up payments on the small trailer she moved into after leaving the plantation. Lyons has done a masterful job piecing together Tebé's words in the various chapters, which are arranged around themes in her painting and events in her life, and she has skillfully and sensitively framed those words with an opening editor's note and chapter and a closing commentary in this richly satisfying volume. CCBC categories: Biography / Autobiography; The Arts. 1998, Houghton Mifflin, 48 pages, $16.00. Ages 12 and older.

adicionado por kthomp25 | editarCCBC (Cooperative Children's Book Center Choices, 1998)
 
Hazel Rochman (Booklist, August 1998 (Vol. 94, No. 22))
Like Lyons' illustrated biographies of African American artists Harriet Powers and Horace Pippin, this is as much about social history as about painting. in this book, Lyons acts as editor, quoting extensively from taped interviews and articles so that artist Hunter speaks in her own voice ("Paintings catch memories a-crossing my mind. Pictures of the hard part of living. The easy parts, too, like fishing and dancing"). Clementine Hunter (aka Tebe ) was the first self-taught African American woman folk artist to receive national attention. Her fine paintings are reproduced in full color, some small, a few full-page, and, like her words, they show and tell a manual laborer's story: what it was like to work in the fields and in the kitchen of the big house a century ago, what it was like to be a wife and a mother and a member of a close Creole community in northwest Louisiana. Lyons' brief, unobtrusive captions about subject and technique help you appreciate the visual images. Hunter was illiterate, but the combination of her pictures and her confident, direct, unpretentious idiom makes for a vivid personal narrative. Category: Older Readers. 1998, Houghton, $16. Gr. 7-12.
adicionado por kthomp25 | editarBooklist, Hazel Rochman
 
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Born in northwest Louisiana in 1886. Called Tebé by her family, Hunter lived and worked on Melrose Plantation for more than 75 years. In colors as bright as the Louisiana sky, she shows the backbreaking work required to pick cotton, gather figs, cut sugar cane, and harvest pecans. Tebé's art portrays the good times, too. Scenes of baptisms, weddings, and church socials celebrate a rich community life that helped the workers survive. Hunter's work holds a special place in art history. She was the first self-taught artist to receive a fellowship from the Rosenwald Fund, in 1945, and the first self-taught African-American woman artist to receive national media attention. Between 1945 and 1987, over fifty museums and galleries showed her works. Some writers have called Clementine Hunter a creative genius. To others she was not a real artist but a "plantation Negro." Many were surprised that an older woman with no training could produce art at all. Now considered one of the finest folk arti

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759.13The arts Painting History, geographic treatment, biography United States and Canada United States

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