Look and Learn with Hoot
Friday, September 21, 2012Mississippi Museum of Art
10:30 AM
10:30 AM
The Mississippi Museum of Art hosts an event for 4-5 year olds and their parents. This educational opportunity features a hands-on art activity and story time. Please dress for mess. This month’s story is Art Dog by Thacher Hurd. 45-minute program.
Arthur Dog is employed as a guard at the Dogopolis Museum of Art. The museum houses the works of such painters as, “Vincent Van Dog, Pablo Poodle, Henri Muttisse and Leonardo Dog Vinci.”
Arthur is mild-mannered and lives a quiet life, except when
the moon is full. During those nights,
Arthur’s appearance and personality change.
Donning a mask and a beret and carrying a box containing paints and
brushes, he creeps throughout the city as a graffiti artist. With a splat of his tail, Arthur signs his
murals, “Art Dog.”
Jail, however, cannot hold the innocent Art Dog; he uses his paint brush to paint an open window where there are bars. He leaps out.
Now free, Art Dog needs transportation. He paints a “Brushmobile” which runs on paint instead of gas.
Using his keen canine sense of smell, he searches for and locates the real culprits at an abandoned warehouse. A scuffle occurs, but instead of using a weapon, Art Dog brandishes his paintbrush. “Paint! En garde! Touche!” When the fighting ceases, the criminals are shown embedded in a piece of art.
The police arrive, accompanied by the museum director. The museum director, impressed with Art Dog’s “Messterpiece”, offers him a show at the Dogopolis Museum. On the day of his show, Art Dog paints a masterpiece in the sky titled “City Rhapsody.” Everyone in attendance is awed, but then suddenly Art Dog is gone leaving everyone, except the reader, wondering, “who was Art Dog?”
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