Cover art for DEGAS AND THE DANCE

DEGAS AND THE DANCE

The Painter and the Petits Rats, Perfecting Their Art
Age Range: 7 - 10
Buy now from
AMAZON.COM
BARNES & NOBLE
LOCAL BOOKSELLER
Add to my list

KIRKUS REVIEW

A gloriously illustrated volume appropriately emphasizes process in its examination of Degas’s ballet paintings. “[Degas] learned that ballet training was very much like studying art. It took hard work and hours and hours of practice. Degas drew the same poses again and again, just as the dancers repeated their positions and steps again and again.” From this opening, Rubin (The Yellow House, 2001, etc.) proceeds to describe Degas’s fascination with the discipline of the ballet and his determination to capture both the beauty and the work of the dance. The simple text draws on primary-source material, including Degas’s own writings and those of his contemporaries and subjects, itself painting a portrait of an extraordinarily dedicated artist whose perfectionism led him to reclaim a gift made to a friend in order to tweak it. After ruining it and providing a different painting in apology, the friend reportedly chained the replacement to his wall. Such humanizing anecdotes accompany a host of thoroughly and thoughtfully captioned reproductions of his work; studies frequently appear next to the finished paintings to demonstrate his process. Degas’s experiments with media are succinctly described and illustrated, as is the effect of his increasing blindness on his art. One small flaw is the narrative’s assignment of Degas to the Impressionist school; many art historians place him, with his supremely humane depictions of weary dancers, in the school of Realism. The narrative’s focus is exclusively on Degas’s work with the dance; a biographical note (in forbiddingly dense type) follows, sketching out in more detail his full career. An author’s note and bibliography (in equally forbidding tiny type) round out this altogether lovely offering. (Picture book/nonfiction. 7-10)

Pub Date: Oct. 1st, 2002
ISBN: 0-8109-0567-1
Page count: 32pp
Publisher: Abrams
Review Posted Online:
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1st, 2002



MORE BY SUSAN GOLDMAN RUBIN

Children Cover art for THEY CALL ME A HERO
by Daniel Hernandez
Children Cover art for DIEGO RIVERA
by Susan Goldman Rubin
Children Cover art for JEAN LAFFITE
by Susan Goldman Rubin
Children Cover art for MUSIC WAS IT
by Susan Goldman Rubin
Children Cover art for JACOB LAWRENCE IN THE CITY
by Susan Goldman Rubin