Wild and Tame Animals by Dahlov Ipcar / ISBN 9781909263642 / A nice hardcover reprint of a book first published in 1962 / 48 pages, 8.25 x 10.25 inches / published by Flying Eye Books
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Readers will begin a journey of discovery as Dahlov Ipcar presents a wealth of feral and fierce animals trained by our early ancestors to the tame animals we know today!
Flying Eye Books is delighted to introduce a new generation of readers to Dahlov Ipcar's classic stories with the inimitable and stunning Dahlov Ipcar Collection, painstaking reproductions of Dahlov's spot color classics. Rebuilt from the original plates and intensive digital scanning of the original titles (many dating back five decades), these are the highest quality Ipcar titles on the market.
DAHLOV IPCAR (1917-2017) was an American painter, illustrator, and artist known for colorful paintings featuring animals in farm settings or the wild. In 1945 she illustrated The Little Fisherman, her first children's book, a classic Golden Book written by noted children's author Margaret Wise Brown. Ipcar went on to write and illustrate thirty children's books of her own. She also wrote four fantasy novels for a slightly older audience, as well as a volume of short stories for adults. Her art is significant in the social realism movement. In 1972 Dahlov and her husband together received the Maine Governor's Award for "significant contributions to Maine in the broad field of the arts and humanities." She also received three honorary degrees from The University of Maine, Colby, and Bates colleges. In 1998 The University of Minnesota honored Dahlov with The Kerlan Award for Children's literature. In 2012 the Farnsworth Museum gave Dahlov the Maine In America Award, an honor given to an individual or group who has made an outstanding contribution to Maine and its role in American Art. Ipcar's works are now in the permanent collections of museums such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Brooklyn Museum in New York and recent exhibitions have been displayed in Maine and across the US.