illustrator:
David Díaz
Amazon
Children’s Publishing, 2012
grades 6-up
Spanish
As in her
other poem-biographies, Bernier-Grand’s elegant free verse is crisp and clean,
with every word precisely chosen. Here, in 40 carefully researched poems, she
chronicles the creative and turbulent life of Pablo Picasso—profound narcissist
(“yo el rey”), notorious philanderer (“ravenous for orgies”), tormented hypochondriac
(death, “the mistress that never leaves you”), loving father (“let the children
just be children”)—and artistic genius, perhaps one of the most important of
the past century. Although Bernier-Grand frankly discusses Picasso’s many
relationships and marriages and how the women in his life inspired his artistry
(“As paint is to brush, women are to Picasso’s art”), she neither
sensationalizes nor demeans them.
Here, Bernier-Grand
writes of Picasso’s main obsession:
When Picasso has emptied himself of painting, he draws,when he has emptied himself of print making, he sculpts,when he has emptied himself of sculpting, he illustrates,when he has emptied himself of illustrating, he photographs,when he has emptied himself of photographing, he writes poems,when he has emptied himself of writing poems, Picasso paints.when he has emptied himself of drawing, he make ceramics,when he has emptied himself of ceramics, he makes prints.
Extensive back
matter includes a biographical essay, entitled “Pablo Picasso and the Mistress
Who Never Left Him,” which fills in any and all gaps in the poetry; a
chronology, a glossary of Spanish words and terms, a list of sources, and
copious notes on paintings and quotes.
Interspersed
throughout the book are reproductions of some of Picasso’s paintings, including
an exhausted woman bent over an ironing board, portraits of Gertrude Stein and
Georges Braque, and sex workers in a brothel. I was especially
glad to see Picasso’s perhaps most important and definitely most famous
painting, “Guernica,” which memorializes the Nazi bombing in 1937 that killed
some 3,000 people, injured more than another 1,000, and destroyed the Basque
town. Accompanying the painting on a two-page spread are a descriptive poem and
short historical note.
Bernier-Grand writes:
Monday—market day
Guernica
Basque city
bombed.
Peasants shot from the air.
Children and women
horses, sheep, cattle
slaughtered.
Terrible deaths.
Picasso paints:
eyes open in horror,
mouths shrieking,
a horse screaming,
a shocked bull.
As an introductory biography of a particular artist, Picasso presents myriad opportunities
for teachers of middle- and high school students: an introduction to modern art
and artists, an exploration of the relationships between art and history and
censorship (including point-of-view depictions of world events), a discussion
of the many and varied forms of cultural expression, and a model for writing
exercises of bio-poems.
In answer
to those reviewers who criticized Picasso
for not being a “happy” book and/or suggested that children should not be
exposed to the seamy sides of Picasso’s life, I would say this: Every child who
watches television, and every teenager who reads graphic novels, is exposed to sexuality,
death, disease, suffering and war—in situations and circumstances that occur
every day. I’d rather have children read an honest biography that discusses the
issues of a person’s life than one that obfuscates them. Bernier-Grand is a
brilliant storyteller who pushes boundaries and takes great care with her
words. She is also ethical; I don’t believe she would ever attempt to conceal unpleasant facts about someone whose
biography she decides to research and write. I applaud her choices, especially
here. Picasso: I the King, Yo el rey is a remarkable achievement.
It’s an illuminating and provocative work of art—poetically and visually.
Highly recommended.
—Beverly
Slapin
(published 11/21/13; paragraph redacted and note added, 2/15/18)
(published 11/21/13; paragraph redacted and note added, 2/15/18)
Note, 2/15/18: Multiple women have come forward with public statements that David Díaz sexually harassed them. After investigating claims against Díaz, the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI) removed him from its board and conference faculty, and expelled him from the organization. Several other conferences have banned him as well. We have redacted our references to his art in this review. |