Marilyn JS Goodman is an art and museum education specialist who has served as Director of Education for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. Her previous books include Learning Through Art (1999).
With a passion for the magic and importance of early childhood
drawing and painting, Marilyn JS Goodman successfully demystifies
this complex activity, essential to children’s development.
Goodman’s wisdom and knowledge offers a concise and refreshing look
into the history and meaning of children’s art making, tracking
important age-appropriate developments through abundant
illustrations and insightful observations. Children Draw is an
essential guide for parents and caregivers seeking to support this
vital component in their child’s creative learning.
*Philip Matsikas, fine arts teacher, the University of Chicago
Laboratory Schools, Chicago*
Marilyn Goodman's love and respect for children is evident
throughout this brilliant investigation of how and why children
draw. As a working artist, an uncle, and a grown-up version of a
boy who loved to make pictures, I wholeheartedly recommend this
book to any adult with a child in their life as well as anyone
interested in drawing and the many ways it functions for children
during the various stages of their development.
*Alexander Stadler, author and illustrator of the Beverly
Billingsly series, the Julian Rodriguez books, and several other
books for children*
Goodman’s delightfully illustrated and highly accessible text
celebrates our imagination. In sharing her valuable insights, she
reminds us that taking pencil to paper remains an essential human
action. This book will help adults nurture a child’s personal
development and expressive skills that will last their
lifetime.
*Erika Sanger, Executive Director, Museum Association of New
York*
Having enjoyed watching my children draw over the years, I found
this book fascinating. Marilyn Goodman looks at each of the five
stages in children‘s drawing development, explaining what is going
on at each stage, such as how scribbling is primarily a physical
enjoyment while making large muscle movements; when children
discover they can transform a line into an enclosed shape; and why
many pre-adolescent children feel more comfortable drawing anime
characters.
*Juno Magazine*
This beautifully illustrated book by Marilyn JS Goodman, jam packed
with real examples of children’s drawings, takes readers through
the different stages of drawing from scribbling and basic human
forms through to visual schema and realism. Each one illustrates
the well-researched text exploring how drawing processes help
children express themselves and make meaning in the world, with
super insights into what’s going on, such as when children’s
drawings are disturbing. The book is full of excellent ideas and
guidance on how to enable the best drawing possible, including
which tools, resources, environments, attitudes will either help or
hinder your child’s drawing, and how your emotional or value
judgements have an impact on the way children draw. Aimed at
parents and teachers alike, this is an essential MUST-HAVE in your
creative armoury.
*Early Arts Magazine*
Informed both by psychology and teaching, and aimed at parents and
carers, this richly illustrated book is a fascinating exploration
both of why children draw, and the meaning and value of drawing for
young people. Some of the art examples are truly wonderful.
*The Bookseller*
Marilyn Goodman is an art and museum education specialist who . . .
pays loving attention to children's artistic progression from those
first scribbles, when primitive motor skills make holding the
crayon a challenging task in itself, to the more elegant lines that
appear to mimic ancient script . . . The heart of the book lies in
its 134 illustrations, many in vivid colour. The heavily whiskered
cat, the reclining dog, the family group seen from multiple
perspectives, and the 'thought bubbles' emerging from those tadpole
heads remind us why artists such as Paul Klee and Jackson Pollock
were inspired by feelings, intellect and creativity apparent in
children's drawing.
*TLS*
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