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Showing 1 - 5 of 5 matches in All Departments
A collection of familiar--and less well-known--nursery rhymes illustrated with animal characters.
Two boys discover that their mother loves them equally but in different ways.
We the people-these words embody the ethos of what it means to be an American citizen. As individuals we are a tapestry of colors and creeds; united we are a nation committed to preserving our hard-earned freedom. In this heart-stirring collection of watercolor portraits of military veterans--one from each of the fifty states--artist Mary Whyte captures this ethos as well as the dedication, responsibility, and courage it takes to fulfill that promise.Those who raise their hands to serve may join for different reasons, but all-along with their families-make the extraordinary commitment to place the needs of the country before their own. Whyte gives us the opportunity to meet and to see some of them-to really see them. Whyte's portrait of America includes individuals from many walks of life, some still active duty, and from every branch: women and men, old and young, and from a wide swath of ethnicities, befitting our glorious melting pot. From a mayor to an astronaut, from a teacher to a garbage collector, from a business entrepreneur to someone who is homeless, Whyte renders their unique and exceptional lives with great care and gentle brush strokes. We the People is not only a tour across and through these vast United States, it is a tour through the heart and soul, the duty and the commitment of the people who protect not only our Constitution and our country but our very lives. We can only be deeply grateful, inspired, and humbled by all of them.
Artist Mary Whyte's Down Bohicket Road includes two decades worth
of watercolors--depicting a select group of Gullah women of Johns
Island, South Carolina, and their stories. In 1991, following
Whyte's recovery from a year of treatment for cancer, she and her
husband moved to a small sea island near Charleston, seeking a new
home where they could reinvent themselves far removed from the
hectic pace of Philadelphia. In this remote corner of the South,
Whyte first met Alfreda LaBoard and her devoted group of seniors
who gathered weekly to make quilts, study the Bible, and socialize
in a small rural church on Bohicket Road. Descendants of lowcountry
slaves, these longtime residents of the island influenced Whyte's
life and art in astonishing and unexpected ways.
Boomer's ready for his morning walk. Here's his leash. There's the door. But try as he might, he can't get anyone to pay attention to him. The humans in the house don't rush out the door after breakfast as they normally do. And, most confusing of all, strangers arrive to pack all the things in Boomer's house into boxes. There's definitely something unusual going on. The simple text and heartwarming pictures charmingly depict Boomer's confusion, anxiety, concern, and ultimate delight on this day familiar to allmoving day.
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