Babar as inspired by the masters.

PositionMuseums Today - "Babar's Museum of Art" - Interpretation of art by Laurent de Brunhof, writer of children's books - Brief Article

Laurent de Brunhoff credits his mother Cecile with creating the first Babar tale of a little elephant who seeks solace in the big city after a hunter shoots his parents. She mentioned the story to her husband Jean who used it as inspiration for his first Babar book. Jean de Brunhoff died in 1937 after writing and illustrating seven Babar volumes. "I never thought I would go on with Babar after my father passed away," recalls Laurent. "I wanted to be a painter, but I could not live without Babar."

Laurent and Jean trained at the Academy of the Grande Chaumiere in Paris. Laurent emigrated to the U.S. in 1985, where he continued delighting children with his tales of Babar, Celeste, Alexander, Pom, Flora, Isabelle, Cornelius, and Zephir. These characters are the subject of an innovative exhibition in which de Brunhoff reinterprets many of the great masterworks throughout art history. A particular favorite of his is "A Sunday Afternoon on La Grand Jatte," (1884) by...

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