Illustration of baker in white hat holding pretzel in sunshine.
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Bon Appetit! Savor a Delicious Exhibition of Art by Eric Carle

Cooking with Eric Carle

On view September 20, 2025–August 23, 2026.

The Carle will open a new exhibition this fall that explores Eric Carle’s career through the perspective of food. Cooking with Eric Carle, on view September 20, 2025 – August 23, 2026, will feature more than 50 works dating from 1965-2019. The exhibition is co-curated by Isabel Ruiz Cano, Rachel Hass, and Courtney Waring.

From The Very Hungry Caterpillar to Walter the Baker, Eric Carle’s artwork features creatures and characters enjoying all kinds of food. Food played a big role in launching Eric Carle’s career in book publishing, which began with commissions for Red Flannel Hash and Shoo-Fly Pie (published in 1965), a compilation of folk recipes from across the United States. When he switched over to his signature collage style, Carle continued to feature food in many of his books, often highlighting his own favorite foods and personal stories.

“Exploring Eric Carle’s artwork through the lens of food and cooking offers a delicious treat of a show for our visitors,” said Jennifer Schantz, executive director of The Carle. “His vibrant artwork allows us to imagine tasting sweet honey, smelling the aroma of pretzels baking, and hearing the sizzle of butter in the pancake pan.”

“I have often fantasized about being a chef,” Eric Carle wrote to a fan who asked him if he ever wanted to be something other than an artist. He learned his love of food from his paternal grandmother, a warm soul always in the kitchen, and many of Carle’s stories are inspired by his childhood memories and relationships.

Cooking with Eric Carle examines the role of food in Carle’s work through three thematic sections: Making Meals, Sharing Stories; Playing with Your Food; and Oodles of Doodles.

Illustration of pots and pans.

Eric Carle, Illustration for Pancakes, Pancakes! Collection of the Eric and Barbara Carle Foundation. © 1990 Penguin Random House LLC

Making Meals, Sharing Stories features work from some Carle classics, including Pancakes, Pancakes!, which celebrates the art of starting a meal from scratch. On view in the exhibition is a double-page spread illustrating the steps to making homemade pancake batter. Carle enjoyed making pancakes for breakfast before sitting down to work—a tradition from his childhood in Germany, where he would ask his mother for pancakes after gathering an egg and jam from his grandmother’s kitchen.

Carle’s Uncle Walter owned a bakery, and he remembered “all the sweet smells” when he created Walter the Baker (1995), a story about how pretzels came to be. A tribute to his beloved uncle and a nod to German folklore tradition, work on view from Walter the Baker shows how Carle painstakingly cut out each individual shape of the baked goods in Walter’s shop, including every single roll and pretzel.

Illustration of otter eating cake and coffee in water.

Eric Carle, Illustration for Otter Nonsense by Norton JusterCollection of the Eric and Barbara Carle Foundation. © 1982 Penguin Random House LLC

The section Playing with Your Food features humorous situations involving food. In Twelve Tales From Aesop (1980), one of Carle’s most intricate collage endeavors, a crow falls prey to a fox’s fake praises. When he opens his beak to respond, his tasty meal of sausages falls right into the fox’s lap. Carle departed from his usual collage style to create pen-and-ink artworks for Otter Nonsense by Norton Juster (1982), the author of The Phantom Tollbooth, with whom he shared a love of word play. On view is a playful image of an otter floating in the sea while enjoying cake and coffee, which became the title page illustration.

The final section, Oodles of Doodles, shares some of the many informal drawings that Carle created throughout his life. He sketched thank-you notes on receipts, and created abstract works on the lids of yogurts, his daily afternoon snack. Carle also loved honey, especially sweet and spicy pine honey that he imported from Europe, and he featured the treat in My Very First Book of Food (1986). Artworks on view from this book, which are among some of Carle’s smaller and more delicate pieces, show how he creatively divided the board-book format into split vertical pages, challenging pre-literate readers to match two illustrations together.

Programming

Events related to Cooking with Eric Carle include Exploring Materials: Printmaking, an adult workshop inspired by the exhibition, on March 12. Additional programs will be announced.

Illustration of crow eating a hot dog in a tree.

Eric Carle, Illustration for Twelve Tales from Aesop. Collection of the Eric and Barbara Carle Foundation. © 1980 Penguin Random House LLC.

About The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art

Founded in 2002 by Eric and Barbara Carle, The Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art is the international champion of picture book art. Situated on 7.5 acres in Amherst, Massachusetts, The Carle houses a rich and deep collection of art of more than 300 picture book artists, including Eric Carle (author ofThe Very Hungry Caterpillar), and illuminates its collection through exhibitions, education, programming, and art-making—making it a critical resource for picture book artists and authors, and art-loving communities locally, nationally, and abroad. The Carle’s mission is to elevate picture book art and inspire a love of art and art creation. Since opening its doors more than 20 years ago, The Carle has welcomed more than one million visitors—plus more than four million additional museumgoers who have enjoyed its touring exhibitions around the world.

Explore Further
Upcoming Exhibition
September 20, 2025 - August 23, 2026
Event
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Print, layer, and assemble a series of playful culinary-themed artworks!