

USA nominee in illustration for Hans Christian Andersen Medal Smithson Medal from Smithsonian Institution Newbery Honor Award from American Library Association Caldecott Honor Award from American Library Association

Tomie dePaola has received virtually every significant recognition forhis books in the children's book world, including: He receives nearly 100,000 fan letters each year. His books have been published in over 15 different countries. Over 5 million copies of his books have sold worldwide. He has been published for over 30 years. His studio is in a large renovated 200-year-old barn. Tomie lives in an interesting house in New Hampshire with his four dogs. He remains one of the most popular creators of books for children, receiving more than 100,000 fan letters each year. Tomie dePaola has published almost 200 children's books in fifteen different countries. He was also the 1990 United States nominee for the Hans Christian Andersen Medal for illustration. His particular way with color, line, detail, and design have earned him many of the most prestigious awards in his field, among them a Caldecott Honor Award for Strega Nona, the Smithsonian Medal from the Smithsonian Institution, the Kerlan Award from the University of Minnesota for his "singular attainment in children's literature," the Catholic Library Association's Regina Medal for his "continued distinguished contribution," and the University of Southern Mississippi Medallion. In this lesson, students will learn techniques for unlocking new vocabulary, find out about the legend of Wyoming’s state flower and create a story using symbols. He names Fra Angelico and Giotto, Georges Rouault, and Ben Shahn as major influences on his work, but he soon found his own unique style. The Legend of the Indian Paintbrush can be used when you are studying Tomie dePaola books, doing a Native American Unit, or even when you are studying the southwestern states.
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Eventually, freed of other obligations, he plunged full time into both writing and illustrating children's books. It drove him through the years of teaching, designing greeting cards and stage sets, and painting church murals until 1965, when he illustrated his first children's book, Sound, by Lisa Miller for Coward-McCann. How the young Indian artist finally fulfills his Dream-Vision is lovingly told and illustrated by Tomie dePaola, in words and pictures that capture the spirit. His determination to create books for children led to a BFA from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, and an MFA from the California College of Arts & Crafts in Oakland, California.

By the time he could hold a pencil, he knew what his life's work would be. Tomie dePaola was born in Meriden, Connecticut, in 1934 to a family of Irish and Italian background.
