Skip to Main Content

News Room: Announcements

Alaska State Museum Opens New Exhibit - Illustrating Alaska: Artists Making Children’s Books

by Daniel Cornwall on 2021-01-29T10:55:35-09:00 in Alaska State Museum, Museums | 0 Comments

For Immediate Release
January 28, 2021

A picture containing text, window  Artwork called 'Narwhal's New Friend, by Evon Zerbetz
Figure 1: Narwhal’s New Friend by Evon Zerbetz

Juneau - A new exhibit at the re-opened State Museum explores the colorful and intriguing process of illustrating children’s books.  The exhibit, curated by Sarah Asper-Smith, highlights the process of four different Alaskan illustrators:  Jim Fowler, Evon Zerbetz, Michaela Goade, and Mitchell Watley.  Each has a unique perspective on creating illustrations for a children’s book.  

The opening of Illustrating Alaska: Artists Making Children’s Books is online this First Friday of the month, February 5, beginning at 4:30 p.m. at https://lam.alaska.gov/illustrating-alaska.  The physical exhibit will be on display at the State Museum February 5th through April 3, 2021. 

Jim Fowler is a Juneau-based plein air (outdoor) landscape painter who begins with sketches, then paints his illustrations in acrylic after storyboarding the images. He has illustrated fourteen books for children including the Christopher Award-winning I’ll See You When The Moon Is Full.

Evon Zerbetz began working in printmaking over 20 years ago.  She prefers carving tools to pencils and carves into linoleum to create lino-cuts; after carving the image, she inks the plates and prints her work by hand. She has illustrated ten children’s picture books, including Ten Rowdy Ravens.  Zerbetz received a 2005 Rasmuson Foundation Individual Artist Award and currently lives in Ketchikan.

Michaela Goade, whose Tlingit name is Sheit.een, sketches and paints in watercolor, and then adds digital finishing touches.  Now living is Sitka, she grew up in Juneau and is the 2021 recipient of the prestigious Randolph Caldecott Medal for best picture-book story, We Are Water Protectors

Mitch Watley creates his illustrations in his studio up a flight of 100 stairs, by sketching in pencil first, then coloring in those sketches digitally on the computer.  He has illustrated two children’s books written by his wife, Sarah Asper-Smith, I Would Tuck You In and You are Home With Me.

The various sections of the exhibit show the milestones in the process of making a 32-page children’s book.  The four artists come alive in the exhibit via video, answering questions sometimes posed by kids (“How do you do that? How old are you? How long does it take?”) as well as more conceptual questions (“How do artists deal with drawing the same animals over and over again?”) Visitors will also encounter what different artist studios feel like and are welcome to work on their own sketches in the gallery. 

Illustrating Alaska is presented by ExhibitAK and the Alaska State Museum, with support from: the Alaska State Libraries, Friends of the Alaska State Library, Archives, and Museum; Alaska Litho; Sealaska Heritage Institute - Baby Raven Reads program; Alaska Robotics; Lucid Reverie; Rainy Retreat bookshop; and Hearthside Books. 

A person experiencing a disability who needs accommodation for events hosted by the Alaska State Library, Archives, and Museum can contact the Division’s ADA coordinator at (907) 465‑2912 a week in advance to make any necessary arrangements.

The Museum is open Wednesday through Saturday from noon – 4:00 p.m. Admission is $9 with a $1 discount for seniors; youth 18 and under are always admitted free. An annual pass is available that allows unlimited visits to the Alaska State Museum and the Sheldon Jackson Museum in Sitka for $40. 

Media Contact:

Patience Frederiksen
Director
907.465.2911

patience.frederiksen@alaska.gov
lam.alaska.gov


 Add a Comment

0 Comments.

  Subscribe



Enter your e-mail address to receive notifications of new posts by e-mail.


  Archive



  Return to Blog
This post is closed for further discussion.