Jane Wattenberg is an American author, photographer, and illustrator of books for children. Mrs. Mustard is her pen name.
Artistic career
Jane Wattenberg is the author and photo collage creator of the best-selling accordion-style baby board books, Mrs. Mustard's Baby Faces and Mrs. Mustard's Beastly Babies. She is also the author and photo illustrator of the award winning re-told tale, Henny-Penny and the retelling of the classic Aesop fableThe Boy Who Cried Wolf, which she wove into Never Cry Woof!, wherein dogs guard the sheep instead of a boy. Her most recent photo-illustrated book is The Duck and the Kangaroo, written by Edward Lear. It is the first stand-alone version of this endearing poem, which Lear wrote in the same time period as The Owl and the Pussycat. Wattenberg is influenced by photo collage artist Hannah Höch, painter René Magritte, photographer Herbert Bayer and the 19th Century collage photographer Henry Peach Robinson as well as by animal photographers Ylla and Harry Whittier Frees. Tana Hoban has been another inspiration in the field of children's books as are Vladimir Radunsky and Maira Kalman. At a young age, Wattenberg began photographing with a Brownie camera. Double exposed images from Brownie camera days influenced her future work. Her first published art photo was selected for publication in Rolling Stone in 1972 by Annie Leibovitz, who was photo editor at that time. She has illustrated book jackets for Judy Blume, Ellen Wittlinger, Virginia Euwer Wolfe, Rachel Cohn and Joan Bauer among others and album covers for Herbie Hancock, Daniel Lenz, and The Aqua Velvets. Before making books, Wattenberg's early photo collage work appeared in the Electric Company, Bananas and Dynamite magazines, the latter two edited in the 1970s by R.L. Stine.
Personal life
Jane Rachel Wattenberg was born and raised in Norwalk, Connecticut. Her father was a chemist and amateur photographer. Her mother was an elementary school teacher dedicated to community service, family, and friends. She maintains an urban farm in San Francisco, California where she lives with her husband, a psychoanalyst. They have three adult sons. Wattenberg is a beekeeper, harvesting honey. She raises hens, ducks, goats, as well as an occasional emu and quail.
The Duck and the Kangaroo Greenwillow/HarperCollins
Never Cry Woof! A Dog-U-Drama Scholastic Press
This is the Rain HarperCollins/Greenwillow
Henny-Penny Scholastic Press
Mrs. Mustard's Name Games Chronicle Books
Mrs. Mustard's Beastly Babies Chronicle Books
Mrs. Mustard's Baby Faces Chronicle Books
Publications
Maryann Owen, Librarian Racine Public Library, Wisconsin, "The Duck and the Kangaroo," School Library Journal, November 1, 2009 "Best of Baby Board Books," Booklist, 2005 Valerie Lewis and Walter Mayes, "Valerie and Walter's Best Books for Children," Collins, 2004 Sam Swope, "Once More Upon a Time," New York Times, May 14, 2000, Henny-Penny,Publisher's Weekly, April 10, 2000 Ellen and Paul Kayser, et al., "Pick of the Lists," American Bookseller, March 1990, p. 51 Mrs. Mustard's Baby Faces,Publisher's Weekly, October 13, 1989, p 51. Steven Heller, "Passionate Collagists," Print Magazine, 1983
Awards
Never Cry Woof!, Children's Choice Award Henny-Penny, Best Book Choices, University of Wisconsin Henny-Penny, Blue Ribbon Award for Best Books, Center for Children's Books, University of Illinois Mrs. Mustard's Beastly Babies, American Bookseller's Pick of the Lists