Dancing through fields of color The story of Helen Frankenthaler

Elizabeth Brown, 1964-

Book - 2019

At a time when girls were taught to color inside the lines, Helen Frankenthaler liked to break the rules. She let her colors dance and swirl, running free on her canvas. Each color was a reminder of a memory or an emotion. --

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Picture books
Published
New York : Abrams Books for Young Readers [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Elizabeth Brown, 1964- (-)
Other Authors
Aimée Sicuro, 1976- (illustrator)
Physical Description
40 unnumbered pages : color illustrations ; 28 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781419734106
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Although much of the world wanted young Helen Frankenthaler to color inside the lines, her parents encouraged her to paint freely. In her picture-book debut, Brown uses lyrical text full of action words and ranges of color to describe this lesser-known yet influential abstract expressionist artist from the twentieth century. Although Helen followed the rules in art school, she once again felt free to paint as she liked and buck the male-dominated art world after meeting Jackson Pollock and taking a trip to Nova Scotia. As Helen began experimenting with her own techniques, she developed the soak-stain method in which she poured paints onto large canvases and used mops and other tools to manipulate them. From sunny vacations with her family to dark days after her father's death, loosely drawn illustrations with thick strokes of watercolor, ink, and charcoal pencil evoke both Helen's moods and her abstract style. Accompanied by photos of Helen Frankenthaler in her studio, back matter expands on the artist's influences and techniques and includes a time line, activity, author's note, and sources.--Angela Leeper Copyright 2019 Booklist

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

As a child, Helen Frankenthaler, an Abstract Expressionist who created the Color Field painting movement, shirked rules in favor of free expression. "Instead of going to bed, Helen filled the sink with water. She dribbled in drops of ruby red nail polish and watched the color flow." With sweeping strokes, Sicuro conveys the young artist's joy in the act of creation, her images of seaside landscapes spilling off the canvasses, and waves trailing from the beach she's painting into her bedroom. Following her father's death when she was 11, "her canvases remained blank, her world of colors and light...dark," Frankenthaler attends art school, where she adheres to rigid expectations. But the work of Jackson Pollock reawakens her, liberating her to paint emotively. Back matter provides biographical content, insight into Frankenthaler's creative process, and an art activity. Ages 4-8. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 2-5-A prominent abstract expressionist whose career spanned six decades but who is not as well known as her male contemporaries today, Helen Frankenthaler loved color and celebrated it through an artistic style that came to be known as "soak-stain painting." In this picture book biography, Frankenthaler's early life and career are recounted in language that is every bit as vibrant as the illustrations that recall her paintings. Students with a creative bent will relish reading about Frankenthaler's difficulty conforming to the expectations of her art teachers and, later, those of the art world at large. Then, the story recalls her childhood vacations to the mountains and seaside to demonstrate the techniques Frankenthaler developed for creating paintings as boundless as those natural phenomena. Sicuro's bold illustrations are a wonderful match for a biography on an abstract artist; the saturated colors, thick lines, and rounded shapes work well with Brown's descriptive text to immerse readers in Frankenthaler's world. Two pages of back matter include a more formalized biography of Frankenthaler and examples of her paintings. VERDICT A pitch-perfect expression of a little-known artist in text and illustration alike, this is a top-notch example of the picture book biography.-Katherine Barr, Cameron Village Regional Library, Raleigh, NC © Copyright 2019. 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

American Abstract Expressionist and Color Field movement pioneer Helen Frankenthaler (19282011) is an apt subject for a childrens bookher trademark soak-stain technique, which involved pouring paints onto unprimed canvas, is eminently kid-friendly and easily reproduced in art classes. Introducing Frankenthaler to primary-grade readers, Browns debut picture-book biography limns her subjects creative and imaginative childhood, dutiful art study in college, and early career in mid-twentieth-century NYC. When Frankenthaler meets modernist sensation Jackson Pollock, his drip-and-splatter painting technique inspires her: If he broke the rules, why couldnt she? At this point in the book the rhythmic text begins to mirror Frankenthalers kinetic process: Helen grabbed a bucket of crimson andPOUREDsetting her colors FREE. They RAN and RUSHED. Sicuros compositionsin watercolor, ink, and charcoal pencilcan sometimes be busy, but they consistently reinforce the ideas of movement and color saturation. The strongest illustrations rely on fields of soaked watercolors to evoke this artists essence. Fittingly, an appended Poured Paint/Soak-Stain Activity helps everything seep in, bringing young readers physical understanding of the art. Back matter also includes in-depth discussion of Frankenthalers technique, with photos and a reproduction of the painting Mountains and Sea; a timeline; an authors note; and extensive lists of sources. katrina Hedeen (c) Copyright 2019. 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

Abstract expressionist painter Helen Frankenthaler (1928-2011) carries a deep fascination with color and light from childhood to adulthood.In Frankenthaler's wealthy, white Manhattan family, her parents nurture her artistic tendency toward abstractionbut her schools demand realism. A downcast Frankenthaler creeps past eight easels displaying eight identical pear paintings, while across the page, another version of her dances in midair, brushes in both hands, trailing swirls of nonrepresentational orange. In adulthood, she embraces her own path. The narration frames her artistic motivations as primarily emotional, undermining her deliberate aesthetic decisions. Moreover, though the textual descriptions of Frankenthaler's process are gorgeous ("Colors jetd across the painting, merged and connected, like rivers into oceans"), neither the colorist's groundbreaking "soak-stain" techniqueoils thinned with turpentine so they seep like watercolorsnor her level of influence as "one of the major Abstract Expressionists of the twentieth century" are mentioned until the bountiful backmatter. Sicuro's watercolor, ink, and charcoal pencil illustrations are spirited, the ones about art process especially buoyant; her use of watercolor is actually a better match for Frankenthaler's look than oils would have shown without Frankenthaler's own soak-stain technique. However, there's one enormous visual mismatch: Frankenthaler's work features paint that soaks, flows, bleeds, and wetly saturates canvas, while Sicuro uses mostly controlled and neatly identifiable brush strokes.Greatly enthusiastic, but it waters down Frankenthaler's actual work and importance. (timeline, activities, author's notes, quotes and sources, primary and secondary bibliography) (Picture book/biography. 5-9) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.