Monday, February 11, 2013

Colorful Dreamer

The Story of Artist
Henri Matisse

This post is part of 
Nonfiction Monday
hosted today by Abby the Librarian
and joins It's Monday!
What are you reading?

Dial Books for Young Readers
(pub. 11.8.2012) 32 pages 

A True Tale with A Cherry On Top

     and Illustrator:  Holly Berry

haracter: Henri Matisse

O verview from the jacket flap: 

      "There was once a boy named Henri, whose dreams were full of color even though his hometown was dreary and gray. His parents expected him to take over the family shop when he grew up, but he longed for a more dramatic life, and dreamed of being noticed.
        Then Henri started painting ... and kept painting and dreaming and working at his craft until he'd become one of the most admired and famous artists in the world.
        This vivid, lyrical picture book tells one artist's remarkable story, and in the process inspires all readers to follow their own big dreams."
        
T antalizing taste: 

      "It wasn't easy ... But Henri was stubborn. He refused to give up.
      He dreamed colorful dreams. He painted colorful paintings. And, little by little, people noticed....
       He moved to the coast, where the light was clear and the colors bright. He named his villa 'La Reve' - the Dream - and he filled it with birds and goldfish and flowers and fabrics. Here too he painted, as more and more people noticed."
                       
and something more: Marjorie Blain Parker explains in "A Note about Henri Matisse" at the back of Colorful Dreamer: "And, at first, Matisse's work was laughed at. Art critics sneered at his canvases, considering his technique shocking - the use of green in a woman's face, for example. They called him a Fauve, which is French for 'wild beast'."  
            Just a few days ago, I visited a class of 3rd graders to prepare them for their field trip visit today to The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art where I'm a docent and lead school group tours.  I held up the museum's Matisse painting, Femme au chapeau (Woman with a Hat 1905) and asked the class why they thought the people of Paris were so shocked and angry about this painting when it was first displayed. I called on a boy who was frantically waving his arm, and he responded, "I read a book and it said it was because green isn't a color that is supposed to be on people's faces."  Perhaps it was this very book, and today the boy will get to see the actual painting. Full circle. 

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