"Drawing Babar: Early Drafts and Watercolors" Exhibition

The Morgan Library & Museum

poster for "Drawing Babar: Early Drafts and Watercolors" Exhibition

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A dignified elephant, dressed in a green suit and wearing a yellow crown, walks upright across the page. This image— both absurd and endearing— has become instantly recognizable to several generations of readers throughout the world. The exhibition "Drawing Babar" returns visitors to the two essential moments of Babar's creation: when Jean de Brunhoff and, years later, his son Laurent, set down their initial thoughts on paper. Their earliest drafts, shown in juxtaposition with their finished watercolors, allow viewers to track the changes, both subtle and substantive, that both men made as they refined their work, bringing together word and image with elegance and exuberance. In 2004 the Morgan acquired the working drafts and printer-ready watercolors for "Histoire de Babar," "le petit éléphant" (1931), the first book by Jean de Brunhoff (1899–1937), and "Babar et ce coquin d'Arthur" (1946), the first book by Laurent de Brunhoff (b. 1925). Together these two collections— shown virtually in their entirety for the first time—provide an extraordinary record of the working methods of the two men, both painters turned storytellers. From the naming of Babar himself (first called simply "Baby Elephant") to the introduction of the beloved character Queen Celeste—not present in Jean de Brunhoff's first draft—these early sketches and watercolors provide an intimate look at the creation of an enduring fictional world. Supplementing the Morgan's important collection of manuscripts and drawings are splendid copies of first editions of the earliest Babar books, notable for their large format and stunning graphic appeal.

[Image: Jean de Brunhoff "The elephants carried Babar, Arthur, and Celeste in triumph" (1931) watercolor. Courtesy of The Morgan Library & Museum]

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from September 19, 2008 to January 04, 2009

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