Hélène Desputeaux

Hélène Desputeaux (French: [elɛn depyto]; born July 10, 1959) is a French-Canadian educator, writer and illustrator from Quebec. With writer Christine L'Heureux, she created and illustrated the character Caillou who appeared in a series of children's books and a television series.[1][2]

Hélène Desputeaux
Born (1959-07-10) July 10, 1959
OccupationIllustrator
Notable work
Caillou (1987–present)
Spouse(s)Michel Aubin
Children2

Early life and education

Desputeaux was born in Quebec City, Quebec and received a Bachelor of Arts in visual arts from Laval University and a BEd from the Université du Québec à Montréal.

Career

Desputeaux has produced more than 100 children's books.[3] In 1995, she received the Médaille Raymond-Blais for her body of work.[1]

Desputeaux and the publisher Éditions Chouette went to court to resolve a dispute over the ownership of the Caillou character. A Quebec arbitrator found that the character was jointly owned. This decision was reversed by the Quebec Court of Appeal, which found that the arbitrator could not rule on the question of copyright, but the appeal court's ruling was overturned by the Supreme Court of Canada.[4]

Selected works

Personal life

Desputeaux married children's author Michel Aubin; the couple have two daughters.[1]

gollark: * mesh networking
gollark: It turns out that good, robust, autoconfiguring networking is actually very hard.
gollark: The idea is probably wirelessly doing super high bandwidth stuff like sending video to displays.
gollark: It is called 802.11ad.
gollark: There's also 60GHz WiFi, i.e. more expensive Ethernet cables.

References

  1. The Storymakers: Illustrating Children's Books : 72 snazzy artists and Illustrators Talk about Their Work. Canadian Children's Book Centre. 1999. pp. 46–47. ISBN 1551381079.
  2. "Helene Desputeaux". Robert Munsch. Guelph Public Library.
  3. "Hélène Desputeaux". La charte des auteurs & des illustrateurs.
  4. "Supreme Court of Canada Releases Decision Affecting Arbitration of IP Disputes". Deeth Williams Wall.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.