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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Mercedes Cecilia, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Interview with Mercedes Cecilia

Author Showcase

By Bianca Schulze, The Children’s Book Review
Published: November 20, 2011

Mercedes Cecilia was born and raised in Peru. She studied Naturopathic methods of healing, Jin Shin Jyutsu. Mercedes Cecilia has won several awards for her paintings, her Art in Education programs and community events.

Can you share a little on your background and how you became a children’s book writer and illustrator?

When we came to live in USA, storytelling was a way for me to treasure our diversity as immigrants to a new land. At school, in ninth grade I found myself spinning the few English words I knew to weave the stories about the people of the Andes Mountains.  When I painted an imaginary portrait to give a face to the Amazon River so that it could tell its own story, my first children’s book began.

What inspired you to write Kusikiy, A Child from Taquile, Peru?

I always wanted to write a book about Peru and I treasure the times I lived with the people of Taquile. Since 1980 I have shared slide presentations of Taquile and other small communities of the Andes of Peru, in different universities, and schools. One day in the summer of 2007, I was having lunch with my 7-year-old grandson, Paulo Andres, and we were talking about condors and glaciers, when he asked me if I could draw the APU, the Spirit of the Great Glacier. This is how the story of Kusikiy started; soon I decide to share the story with everyone.

Illustration copyright by Mercedes Cecilia

What age group did you write the book for?

I wrote Kusikiy A Child from Taquile, Peru thinking a child of 5 to 12 would enjoy reading it as well as friends, parents and teachers.  I wanted to make a children’s book, because I feel a book with pictures allows the reader to become a co-creator of the story.

Your artwork is rich and vibrant. Can you tell us how you create your illuminating illustrations?

Illustration copyright by Mercedes Cecilia

Thank you. First I did the drawings and used soft pastels on black tinted paper.  I chose pastels as a medium, because the mineral pigments use to die wool is similar to the pigments in soft pastels. Because weaving and knitting is central to life in Taquile, I wanted to have those bright and pure colors in the illustrations. After I finished illustrating the story and photographed each painting, I used a digital tool to delineate more of the shapes.

Should we expect to see another book from you soon?

Yes, I am now finishing writing and illustrating the story of a girl from a village of

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