Colorful dreamer The story of artist Henri Matisse

Marjorie Blain Parker

Book - 2012

Presents the life and work of the turn-of-the-twentieth-century French artist Henri Matisse, imagining his art-inspired childhood and growth into becoming one of the most admired artists in the world.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Dial Books For Young Readers 2012.
Language
English
Main Author
Marjorie Blain Parker (-)
Other Authors
Holly Berry (illustrator)
Physical Description
1 v. (unpaged) : ill. (chiefly col.) ; 23 x 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780803737587
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* This inspiring picture book about the life of Henri Matisse weaves back and forth between Henri's dreary reality rendered in pencil shades of black, white, and gray and the vivid world of his imagination, depicted in gorgeous full-color pencil, paint, and collage. Much to Henri's parents' dismay, their son does not excel at school, working in the family store, or the violin; instead, he is a dreamer. During his blah stint as a young lawyer, Henri starts to suffer stomach pains and ends up in the hospital, where he has plenty of time and nothing to do. But a set of paints changes all that: he picked up the paintbrush and was transported into paradise. From here, the book really sings as we're treated to Henri's vivid inner life made real on canvas. Parker's lyrical text is accessible to young children and offers a rich look at the artist's life, but it's Berry's art that wows. She manages to capture the vibrancy and rich saturation of Matisse's original paintings and then changes styles to reflect his later-in-life colored-paper cutouts, which he referred to as drawing with scissors. An endnote fills in details about Matisse's life. A great introduction to the renowned artist and a validation of dreamers everywhere.--Kelley, Ann Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

For a boy whose "dreams were full of color," life in Henri Matisse's industrial village is bleak. Young Henri is a source of anxiety for his hardworking parents, who fear he will never make a living; his departure for Paris to study law comes as a relief. Berry (Woof: A Love Story) ties her mixed-media artwork to Matisse's growth and eventual embrace of art. Scenes of Matisse's upbringing and dreary work as a law clerk are drawn in pencil, but when he begins painting, his life transforms. "The moment Henri opened that box, he knew. The colors! This was what he had been dreaming of," writes Parker (When Dads Don't Grow Up). Berry then fills her spreads with vibrant acrylic paintings and collage artwork, integrating flamboyant patterns and tropical motifs that echo the work that Matisse tirelessly creates ("He worked as hard as any artist ever had. He worked until the very day he died"). Readers whose talents stray from the conventional should welcome this joyful affirmation of creative expression. Ages 3-up. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 2-5-This picture-book biography covers Matisse's entire life but focuses on his career aspirations and achievements. The straightforward text takes a lighthearted approach by including details such as young Henri's dream of becoming a magician and his skill with a peashooter. Berry's illustrations are the star of the show; dignified black-and-white drawings represent the artist's dull youth and colorful paintings are introduced when his career takes off. The style of the artwork evokes Matisse more and more as the story progresses, ending, as his career did, with paper cut-out collage. While his life story is not particularly adventurous or exciting, young readers will be drawn in by the obvious affection the author and illustrator feel for their subject. There is not enough detail for reports, but the book may spark interest that can be followed up by further research. A must for art teachers, and a nice addition to history and biography collections.-Heidi Estrin, Congregation B'nai Israel, Boca Raton, FL (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

This picture-book biography opens in a dreary French village where, compared to simple, hard-working villagers like his parents, Henri Matisse didn't "excel at much of anything -- except, perhaps, dreaming." This dreaming is brought vividly to life in illustrations that depict the village in black, white, and gray except for the electrifying pops of color that represent Henri's dreams. The text, too, mirrors the artist's emotional state, describing with glum language the morose years as a misunderstood son and bored law clerk (which "tied his stomach in knots") and then a period bedridden in a hospital. Once Henri discovers painting, the diction becomes more lively ("He picked up the paintbrush and was transported into paradise"). As the story describes Matisse's years as an artist, Berry's illustrations never go back to the original drab palette, instead directly mimicking Matisse's Fauvist use of color and maturing style. Spreads of his time on the French coast nod to specific, well-known Matisse still-life and landscape pieces, while spreads relating his older years during which he "painted" with colored paper incorporate -- then move entirely to -- collage. Though Parker's lyrical text and Berry's impressive mixed-media pictures fully encompass Matisse's chronology, aspirations, talents, and style, an appended note furthers young readers' understanding of one of modern art's preeminent figures. katrina hedeen (c) Copyright 2013. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Matisse's genius was that he never stopped exploring, even as he honored his intense childhood dreams of creativity, color and art. Parker's text is a pitch-perfect and appealing narrative, but the real star here is Berry's art. She first offers careful, almost tight, school-notebooklike drawings of French cities and interiors that effectively convey the gray and noncreative aspects of Matisse's childhood, relieved only by his colorful daydreams. After leaving his small town and working as a law clerk in Paris, Henri was freed from the prison of social convention through his mother's simple gift of a paint box (to pass the time while convalescing from a serious illness). He then exuberantly embraced his life as an artist. Berry seamlessly infuses each successive spread with waves of the characteristically intense, almost excessively vivid, explosive color of the Fauves' palette. She ingeniously incorporates much of Matisse's now-iconic imagery (goldfish, Mediterranean rugs, busy fabrics, Tahitian jungle palm fronds, lemons, leaves, strong geometric shapes, stars and much more). Parker and Berry finally combine to movingly present the methods, meaning and passion that propelled Matisse's later work--simple cutouts in bright monochromatic papers. This inspiring and accessible picture book serves as a brilliant introduction to one artist's vitality. The message? Like Matisse, we must never stop creating and experimenting. (author's note, list of museums with Matisse artwork) (Picture book/biography. 3-5)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.