Henri Matisse: Drawing with Scissors (Smart about Art Series)
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Overview
Keesia and Henri Matisse have the same birthday—New Year’s Eve! That’s why she picks him for her artist report. She finds out that over his long career Matisse made paintings, sculpture, books, costumes, and her favorite—his cut-outs, or what Matisse called “drawing with scissors.” The report is filled with about 20 of Matisse’s masterpieces as well as artwork that Keesia has created in his “style” (cut-out leaves, drawings through windows, fauvist animals). As she follows Matisse through his life she discovers why he is considered one of the greatest artists of the twentieth century.
Presents the life and work of Henri Matisse in the form of a child's school report.
Synopsis
Keesia and Henri Matisse have the same birthday - New Year s Eve! That s why she picks him for her artist report. She finds out that over his long career Matisse made paintings, sculpture, books, costumes, and her favorite - his cut-outs, or what Matisse called "drawing with scissors." The report is filled with about 20 of Matisse s masterpieces as well as artwork that Keesia has created in his "style" (cut-out leaves, drawings through windows, fauvist animals). As she follows Matisse through his life she discovers why he is considered one of the greatest artists of the twentieth century.
Publishers Weekly
The Smart About Art series continues with Henri Matisse: Drawing with Scissors by Jane O'Connor, illus. by Jessie Hartland. Presented and organized in the style of a grade-school report (and written from the perspective of the fictitious "Keesie Johnson"), the latest installment covers the Fauve movement and Matisse's shift from painting to cut-paper collage. (Mar.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly
The Smart About Art series continues with Henri Matisse: Drawing with Scissors by Jane O'Connor, illus. by Jessie Hartland. Presented and organized in the style of a grade-school report (and written from the perspective of the fictitious "Keesie Johnson"), the latest installment covers the Fauve movement and Matisse's shift from painting to cut-paper collage. (Mar.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.Children's Literature
Jane O'Connor takes a unique approach to a biography in this latest addition to the "Smart About Art" series. She includes the usual information about the artist's life and work, but she presents it in an unusual way. The elements of this book combine to suggest that it is, in fact, a school report about Henri Matisse written by elementary school student Keesia Johnson. The first page is a memo supposedly written by Keesia's teacher, Ms. Brandt, and the final page includes the teacher's evaluative comments. The rest of the book includes information about Matisse, supplemented by pictures of the author's work and Keesia's own cartoon-like illustrations. Teachers will find this book especially useful for its duality as both an art information book and a model of a school report. However, the informal nature of the report limits its usefulness to the elementary grades. This book might benefit from a supplemental list of age-appropriate resources about Matisse. 2002, Grosset & Dunlap,— Heidi Hauser Green