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Babar and Celeste convert Celesteville's old railroad station into an art museum containing famous masterworks featuring elephants.Tags
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Babar and Celeste decide to turn the abandoned train station into an art museum to store the art treasures accumulated through their travels. And what a collection! We see many art treasures depicted in the book, including Botticelli's Birth of Venus and Rousseau's The Dream. However, instead of humans populating the paintings and sculptures, we see elephants! The familiar soft and friendly elephants readers have grown to know and love walk us through the transformation of the art museum followed by a stroll through the collection. The story mimics the Parisian's train station turned world famous art museum called the Musee D'Orsay. The children's questions about museum going will help prepare young ones for their first museum show more experience. The children are simply told to, "look, not touch, and tell me what you see." The only negative occurs when the mother hushes the tutor, who is only trying to relate some context to the paintings. The book would work wonderfully as a precursor to a museum visit, with readers relaying to young listeners that museum going should be a pleasant dose of both the educational and the recreational. Recommended for young elementary students and preschoolers. show less
The best of the Babar books! I love the famous paintings with elephants dubbed in.
In this story, the elephant in Celesteville don't use the train station anymore they want to go in cars. So Celeste Babar's wife tells why don't they make a museum of art. I saw the elephant paintings and the real paintings.
"Summary: Babar and Celest convert Celesteville's old railroad station into an art museum containing famous masterworks featuring elephants." I love the elephant artwork!
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Youth: Arts & Crafts
156 works; 1 member
Author Information

223+ Works 7,286 Members
Laurent de Brunhoff is the oldest son of Jean and Cecile de Brunhoff. He was born on August 30, 1925. Jean de Brunhoff, his father, began the Babar series of children's books. Laurent has published many more volumes of the tale of Babar. De Brunhoff, who holds both French and American citizenship, was made an Officier de l¿Ordre des Arts et des show more Lettres, and a Chevalier of the Légion d¿Honneur. There have been major exhibitions of his work and his father¿s work in 1981 at the Centre Culturel du Marais in Paris, in 1983-84 in the United States (Minneapolis Institute of the Arts, Baltimore Museum of Art, Toledo Museum of Art, among others). The work of Jean and Laurent de Brunhoff has also been the subject of books by Anne Hildebrand, Jean and Laurent de Brunhoff: The Legacy of Babar, and by Nicholas Fox Weber, The Art of Babar. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Work Relationships
Has as a reference guide/companion
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Babar's Museum of Art
- Original title
- Babar's Museum of Art
- Original publication date
- 2003
- People/Characters
- Babar; Celeste; Alexander; Pom; Flora
- Important places
- Celestville; Babar's Museum of Art, Celestville
- First words
- Every Sunday, Babar and Celeste took their balloon up over Celesteville.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)There were many possibilities, and they were all exciting.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 356
- Popularity
- 88,104
- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (3.84)
- Languages
- English, French, German, Spanish
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 9
- ASINs
- 5





























































