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list price: $19.95
edition:Paperback
also available: eBook
category: Biography & Autobiography
published: May 2016
ISBN:9781771511742
publisher: TouchWood Editions

Emily Carr As I Knew Her

by Carol Pearson, foreword by Robert Amos

tagged: women, artists, architects, photographers
Description

Out of print for more than 40 years, this is an intimate and heartwarming biography that throws a whole new light on one of Canada's most beloved and iconic artists.

In 1916, Emily Carr wasn’t famous. She was poor, and she taught art classes to children to make a living. One of her students was seven-year-old Carol Pearson. Pearson spent hours every day with Carr: they painted together at the water’s edge, and she helped care for the dogs, birds, monkey and other animals that Carr kept as pets. Carr nicknamed Pearson “Baboo,” and Carol called her “Mom.” The two were as close as mother and daughter for twenty-five years, up until Carr passed away.

This touching tribute to Carr illustrates a gentleness and sensitivity not seen in other biographies. Originally published in 1954 and long out of print, this very unique biography reveals Carr's personality more fully than any other. With a new foreword by Robert Amos, Canadian art historian.

"No more penetrating picture will be given us of the great person who was Emily Carr than this ... Humour is mixed with tragedy, and tales that never appeared in Klee Wyck were told to Carol." —the Globe & Mail

About the Authors

Carol Pearson

Carol (WIlliams) Pearson first came to know Emily Carr when her parents enrolled her in art classes with the celebrated painter. Young Pearson soon became one of Carr's closest friends. Their intimate friendship lasted even after Pearson moved to Ontario in 1926. Pearson was a horsewoman and animal trainer, a skill she learned from Carr. She lived in Ontario until her death.


Robert Amos is an artist and writer living in Victoria, British Columbia. His happiest childhood memories were formed at his family’s summer cottage in Muskoka, north of Toronto, a property purchased by his grandfather in 1929. Since moving west in 1975, Amos has focused on the local scene, and eight books of his art and writing have been published. Since 1986 he has been art writer for the Victoria Times Colonist newspaper.
Editorial Reviews

Robert Amos provided both the foreword and the cover image for Emily Carr As I Knew Her. He speaks with Oak Bay New about his original copy and why he wanted the book to be rediscovered.


Read "Lucky Seven", the first story in Carol Pearson's Emily Carr As I Knew Her, in the Vancouver Sun

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