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Georgia in Hawaii: When Georgia O'Keeffe Painted What She Pleased

di Amy Novesky

Altri autori: Yuyi Morales (Illustratore)

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In 1939, artist Georgia O'Keeffe creates nearly twenty paintings as she tours the Hawaiian islands, but refuses to paint pictures of pineapples the way her sponsors tell her to.
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This is a beautiful book about a stubborn artist who refuses to paint what she's paid to paint (a pineapple for Dole). I liked it a lot up until the ending. The last page of the story reads, "And Georgia painted a pineapple!" but it doesn't show the painting of the pineapple. Anticlimax to the max. I had to google image search "Gerogia O'Keefe pineapple" to see it, and it doesn't really look like a pineapple. Then I saw that the illustration on the Author's Note page does indeed show a partially obscured version of Georgia's pineapple painting, but there's no way a young reader would know that without first knowing what the pineapple painting looked like.

So, a great fun book, with an ending that leaves the reader hanging. ( )
  LibrarianDest | Jan 3, 2024 |
I never knew O'Keeffe spent time in Hawaii, so it piqued my interest to run across this title seeing as I'm used to her desert work. Even better, I was doubly excited when I found that Yuyi Morales did the illustrations as she is one of my absolute favorite children's book artists(and authors). The illustrations are so appropriately fluid, vibrant, and lush--combining well the styles of both O'Keeffe and Morales--and Novesky offers enough engaging information to make it an interesting story. I look forward to exploring the near 20 paintings of O'Keeffe's work inspired by the islands. ( )
  LibroLindsay | Jun 18, 2021 |
In the story, Georgia in Hawaii, Georgia was asked to come to Hawaii to paint two pictures of pineapples to help promote pineapple juice. Georgia agreed and went to Hawaii. She was greeted by all of these people with different gifts for her. She wanted to live by the pineapple fields, but the Pineapple Company told her only workers live near the fields. They gave her a room and presented her with a pineapple. Georgia was not pleased, and she decided that no one can tell her what to paint. She went out on her own. First she went to Maui to paint the waterfalls, green pleated mountains, different shapes of hardened lava, and the blue sea. Next, Georgia went the the big island of Hawaii. She painted a nana Honua because it reminded her of her favorite desert flower, the jimsonweed. After her tour was over, Georgia had to go back home to present her paintings to the Pineapple Company. She had almost twenty paintings, but none of pineapples. The Pineapple Company was not pleased. Georgia was happy because she got to paint what she wanted, not what she was told to paint. After the meeting, Georgia thought about what the company wanted. Georgia painted two Hawaiian pineapples for the company. ( )
  mikementzer21 | Feb 16, 2017 |
Illustrated by Yuyi Morales, whom I am doing a author study on so I really paid attention to the illustrations. They were beautiful and went with the story well. ( )
  maturne2 | Dec 1, 2016 |
This book is about a young girl named Georgia who was hired to paint a pineapple for a pineapple company. She went on a tour around the world to find pineapples to paint but instead painted flowers she seen because she didn't want to be told what she could and could not paint. At the end she reminisced on all the beautiful things she seen when traveling and she painted the pineapple for the company so they wouldn't be mad.
This book is good for fourth graders and up because the vocabulary used in the book is too difficult for lower grade levels. This book should be used when teaching metaphors, similes, and description words.
This is a non-fictional picture book. ( )
  clarionb | Nov 2, 2016 |
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Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
Amy Noveskyautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Morales, YuyiIllustratoreautore secondariotutte le edizioniconfermato
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In 1939, artist Georgia O'Keeffe creates nearly twenty paintings as she tours the Hawaiian islands, but refuses to paint pictures of pineapples the way her sponsors tell her to.

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