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(2)
K-3
Illustrated by
Jennifer Mack-Watkins.
Elijah Pierce was a Black Mississippi folk artist born in 1892 in a log cabin. In this imagined encounter, a young Black boy gets his hair cut at Pierce's barbershop and is treated to a tour of the barbershop's art gallery, featuring Pierce's wood carvings. "Sculptures and walking sticks. Models and message signs...Everyday people. And famous people. Everything I carve, I want it to tell some kind of story." Mack-Watkins uses printmaking techniques and mixed-media collage to create colorful, textured art representing Pierce's folk art. The brief narrative works on several levels. It showcases the artist and his work and how he was instrumental in the growing recognition of folk art in the American art scene. We also see how Pierce's art inspires a young boy's burgeoning interest in making art of his own. The story would pair well with Tate and Christie's It Jes' Happened: When Bill Traylor Started to Draw (rev. 5/12). Back matter includes an authors' note, images of Pierce's art, an artist's note, a timeline, and a list of museums where Pierce's work is shown.
Reviewer: Dean Schneider
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
March, 2023
165 pp.
| Holiday
| February, 2014
|
TradeISBN 978-0-8234-2944-8$16.95
(3)
4-6
Eleven-year-old Eliza, who has ADHD, really wants to take a cake-decorating class. When she overhears her parents discussing how many activities she starts but never finishes, Eliza proposes to prove them wrong by taking her brother's place in the taekwondo class he has, ironically, quit. Readers will cheer as, much to her surprise, sympathetic Eliza finds focus and success in martial arts. Glos.