"George Scraps His Sculpture" | |
Season/Series: | 24 |
---|---|
Number in season: | 1a |
Original Airdate: | March 10, 2021[1] April 12, 2021[2] |
Credits | |
Written by: | Glen Berger |
Storyboard by: | Karine Charlebois |
Episodes | |
Previous "D.W. and Dr. Whosit" |
Next "Arthur's Big Meltdown" |
Read transcript |
"George Scraps His Sculpture" is the first half of the first episode in the twenty-fourth season of Arthur.
Kevin Sampson makes a special appearance as himself.
Summary
George volunteers to create a piece of art for the county-wide art show, but can't decide what to make.
Plot
The episode begins with a fantasy in which the kids are visitors at an art gallery. Buster, as a French detective, bursts in and reveals that a painting is a forgery created by Le George. His copies are indistinguishable from the originals, except Le George always spills some of his lunch on them. Buster arrests Le George, remarking that Le George could not avoid being himself.
George is chosen to represent the class at the County Art Show. A few days before the event, he still has not come up with anything.
Muffy suggests doing something like Rodin's The Thinker. George creates "Thinking Moose", but does not like it.
Francine suggests a kinetic sculpture, like one from Arthur Ganson. George makes one and nearly gets hit by it.
Buster shows George the Lincoln Memorial and Binky shows George a statue, Degas's "Little Dancer".
After listening to Binky and Muffy quarrel over food, George complains to Carl that everyone has a different taste. In order to please everyone, he has created a sculpture out of scraps that he does not understand himself. Carl likes it, although it does not look like a train.
George and Carl put the sculpture down on the curb, so George's dad can drive it to the fair, but it gets picked up by a recycling truck. George follows the truck to the city dump, where he meets Mr. Frensky and Kevin Sampson, who is collecting material for his art. George recovers his sculpture, but it falls apart, so Kevin shows him the dump, where George is inspired by some old stuff.
George takes some materials home, but still has no idea what to make.
Resigned, George is about to use a gift certificate for art supplies that Muffy gave him, but then he sees a sign advertising a Kevin Sampson gallery. He goes there and sees many sculptures made of trash. Kevin tells George that he likes to imagine himself as a little bird flying over his creations to see them better. He also tells George that he should just be himself, since that is what his friends are counting on.
George has an idea. He asks Mr. Morris for the trash from Mr. Ratburn's class and builds something out of it. He uses Kevin Sampson's bird trick to examine it.
At the art fair, George presents a train which is made of trash that was used by his friends, e.g. wrapping paper from a gift Francine gave to Muffy for cat-sitting. George's friends applaud. Wally says that the sculpture is not his cup of tea, and George tells him that he is entitled to his own opinion.
Characters
Major
Minor
- Arthur Read
- Carl Gould
- Oliver Frensky
- Mr. Ratburn
- Brain (does not speak)
- Wally
Cameo
- Lydia Fox
- Ramon Molina
- Fern Walters
- Sue Ellen Armstrong
- Prunella Deegan
- Ladonna Compson
- Ed Crosswire
- Millicent Crosswire
- Bakery Guy
Mentioned
Trivia
- Artist Kevin Blythe Sampson guest stars in this episode as himself.
- The episode uses real-life still images of several works of art integrated into the animation.
Episode connections
- In the cold open, several of the characters wear their outfits from "Fountain Abbey."
- George trying to create art that pleases everyone is similar to "Arthur Writes a Story."
- The Thinker was previously seen as a snow sculpture by D.W. in "Arthur and the Crunch Cereal Contest," at the art Museum in "Binky Barnes, Art Expert," and parodied by RoboCount in "Brain's Biggest Blunder."
- Machine with Oil was previously shown in "Muffy's Art Attack," which also featured Arthur Ganson as a guest star.
- The Van Gogh self-portrait, Vertumnus, the Arnolfini portrait, La Berceuse and The Marriage of the Virgin were previously seen in "Framed!"
- Buster thinks that Lincoln was as big as his statue. D.W. made the same mistake in "D.W. Goes to Washington."
- Carl's love of trains from "When Carl Met George" is brought up again.
Cultural references
- The paintings in Le George's studio are:
- Self Portrait by Vincent van Gogh, 1889
- Vertumnus by Giuseppe Arcimboldo, 1591
- Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci, ca. 1503-1506
- The paintings in Inspector Buster's study are:
- The Arnolfini Portrait by Jan van Eyck, 1434
- The Fruit Basket by Giuseppe Arcimboldo, ca. 1590
- La Berceuse by Vincent van Gogh, 1889
- The Marriage of the Virgin by Raphael, 1504
- The Esterel Mountains by Claude Monet, 1888
- Muffy shows George a photo of The Thinker by Auguste Rodin (1904).
- Francine shows George a video of Machine with Oil by Arthur Ganson.
- Buster shows George a photo of the statue in the Lincoln Memorial by Daniel Chester French (1914-22).
- Binky shows George a photo of Little Dancer of Fourteen Years by Edgar Degas (ca. 1880).
- The photo George got from Brain shows Unique Forms of Continuity in Space by Umberto Boccioni (1913).
- When Kevin Blythe Sampson is holding the box of hands at the recycling center, one of the hands resembles the design of Mickey Mouse's hands.
- The sculptures in the Kevin Sampson gallery are (from left to right):
- Mother Oatman, 1999
- The Cathedral of St. John the Divine, 2017
- Red Stripe, 2014
- The Golden Spike, 2010
- The Kron-Printzen, 2014
- USS Mr. Imagination
- Papa Midnight, 2016
- Venezia-African Jack, 2012
- (I was unable to find the names of the wall sculptures.)
Errors
- When everyone is cheering after George unveils his sculpture, Mr. Ratburn is missing his whiskers in one scene.
Gallery
Promotional images
Screenshots
References
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