Gerald McDermott

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Gerald McDermott is an award-winning filmmaker, children’s book author & illustrator as well as an expert on mythology. His work often combines bright colors and styles with ancient imagery. [1] His picture books encompass folktales and cultures from all around the world.


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[edit] Biography

Gerald McDermott was born January 31, 1941 in Detroit, Michigan. His parents supported the arts and encouraged his love of reading. McDermott began studying art at the age of four when he started taking Saturday workshops at the Detroit Institute of Arts, the museum in his homewtown. There was basic art instruction in the morning and then students were encouraged to sketch from the various collections of the museum. [2] In elementary and middle school he continued to sketch and paint, was an actor in a weekly radio program, and he studied ballet as well as music. All of these creative experiences would help McDermott create animated films and books later in life.

McDermott continued his education at Cass Technical, a public high school for the gifted with a notable art program. In 1959 he was awarded a National Scholastic Scholarship to the Pratt Institute of Design in New York City. As an extra-curricular summer project McDermott decided to produce an animated film and chose The Stonecutter a story he had loved as a child.[3] McDermott conducted extensive research into the cultures and customs of the story's origins. In 1962 during his junior year at Pratt McDermott took a leave of absence to work as a graphic designer for WNET, a New York educational television channel. He also produced several animated pieces for The Electric Company on PBS. He received his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Pratt in 1964.

He produced three more short films soon after graduation Sunflight in 1966, Anansi the Spider in 1969, and The Magic Tree in 1970. In 1970 George Nicholson, a children's book editor, contacted McDermott and suggested adapting his films into picture books. In 1972 McDermott published his first illustrated retelling of a folktale, Anansi the Spider: A Tale from the Ashanti. [4] The Magic Tree and Arrow to the Sun soon followed in picture book form. Arrow to the Sun released in 1974 was also developed simultaneously in film and would be McDermotts last animated film.

In the 1980s he published two books that paid homage to the traditions of his Irish heritage: Daniel O'Rourke and Tim O'Toole and the Wee Folk. During this time he also illustrated some books written by Marianna Mayer. In the early 1990s McDermott began working on a series of trickster tales and two works of mythological creation stories.

[edit] Awards

1972 Anansi the Spider received a Caldecott Honor

1974 Arrow to the Sun received a Caldecott Medal

1993 Raven: A Trickster Tale from the Pacific Northwest received the Caldecott Honor and Boston Globe-Horn Book Honor Award

1997 Musicians of the Sun received recognition from the American Orff-Schulwerk Organization


[edit] Trickster tales

Trickster tales are a traditional form of literature that recount the adventures, and misadventures, of well-known folk figures. The main characters sometimes devote their energy towards constructive goals but often have selfish motives. They usually succeeed, but sometimes are self-defeating or become victims. McDermott himself said: "...tales of the trickster still speak to us in a gentle, humorous way about the strengths and weaknesses of humankind."


1980 Papagayo: The Mischief Maker (a Brazilian folktale)

1992 Zomo the Rabbit: A Trickster Tale from West Africa

1993 Raven: A Trickster Tale from the Pacific Northwest

1994 Coyote: A Trickster Tale from the American Southwest

2001 Jabuti the Tortoise: A Trickster Tale from the Amazon


[edit] Bibliography

1977 The Voyage of Osiris

1979 The Knight of the Lion

1973 The Magic Tree: The Tale from the Congo

1984 Daughter of Earth: A Roman Myth

1986 Daniel O'Rourke: An Irish Tale

2003 Creation


[edit] Illustration works

1985 Alley Oop! by Marianna Mayer

1987 The Brambleberrys Animal Book of Big & Small Shapes by Marianna Mayer

1991 The Brambleberry's Animal Alphabet by Marianna Mayer

1991 The Brambleberry's Animal Book of Colors by Marianna Mayer


[edit] External links

Official Site

[edit] References