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The Calico Jungle
by Dahlov Ipcar

$17.95
Hardcover, Illustrated Children's Book
ISBN: 978-1-934031-31-5





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Other books by Dahlov Ipcar:
Farmyard Alphabet
Hardscrabble Harvest
One Horse Farm
The Cat at Night
My Wonderful Christmas Tree
Wild Animal Alphabet
The Little Fisherman
(written by Margaret Wise Brown)

 

Look inside:
View pages from
The Calico Jungle.

 

REVIEWS
"Dahlov Ipcar's illustrations are never cutesy or sacharine sweet – they are just simple and clear. And how is it that the face of a calico camel can show emotion? I'm not sure how she does it, but we love this book. And as always with Islandport Press, the book's pages are heavy and bound beautifully – a book I can easily see saving as an heirloom."
– Amy Henry, The Black Sheep Dances

ABOUT THE BOOK
A mother gives her little boy a handmade quilt, but it's more than just a quilt. It's a whole world where fantastical animals run, hide, swim, and frolic in a calico jungle. The boy enters this wild landscape and travels through it. He spies calico birds pecking at fruits, sees calico elephants giving each other shower baths, discovers spotted horses, striped lions, and calico fish shining like jewels.

As he nears the far side of the quilt, the animals he encounters are curled up asleep. The boy grows sleepy, too. His eyes close and he dreams that he is "walking through the calico jungle, under the flowering trees, where all the strange and wonderful animals lived."

This marvelous book by renowned artist and illustrator Dahlov Ipcar will spark every child's imagination, inspire them to question what is real, and invite them to explore a world full of color and possibility.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dahlov Ipcar was born in Vermont, raised in Greenwich Village, and summered in Maine after her parents (the famed sculptor William Zorach and artist Marguerite Zorach) bought a farm on Georgetown Island in 1923. Thirteen years later, eighteen-year-old Dahlov, an aspiring artist, married Adoph Ipcar. The young couple left New York City in 1937 to live on the Maine farm where they first met.

By the early 1940s, Ipcar had nearly given up thoughts of writing and illustrating books, but was contacted by a New York publisher to illustrate The Little Fisherman, the latest title by Margaret Wise Brown. The struggling young artist jumped at the chance, and this charming title helped launch a four decade run that saw her write and illustrate more than thirty children's books of her own.

In the milestone book, The Calico Jungle, first published in 1965, Dahlov was feeling the urge to express herself in a new way. The book's illustrations marked a dramatic change in style as she began to explore "the endless possibilities of patterns. It had a terrific influence on my fine art," she says. "It inspired me to change my whole style." The Calico Jungle is a shining example of Dahlov's exploration into the juxtaposition of shapes, colors, patterns, and light that have become the hallmark of her later work.

Today, Ipcar's intricate, distinctive, and fanciful artwork is known worldwide, with pieces of her work in the collections of numerous renowned museums, including The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Meanwhile, Ipcar still lives and paints in the 1860s farmhouse that she shared with Adolph for nearly seventy years. She once said she didn't want celebrity or fame; she just "wanted to be recognized." In retrospect, a fairly modest statement for a Maine – and American – treasure.


EXCERPT
Once there was a little boy whose mother made him a wonderful calico quilt for his bed. It was a beautiful quilt, all covered with jungle trees and flowers and animals.

Every night, after his mother tucked him into bed and kissed him good night, the little boy lay there in his bed, in the dim evening light, and looked at all the animals among the strange and wonderful trees.