Fine-arts masterpieces presented to showcase properties and possibilities of color.
Reproductions shine on the page, though no titles or artist credits appear until the backmatter. František Kupka’s Disks of Newton is a colorful explosion; Jasper Johns’ Nines combines simplicity with nuance in a three-primary design. However, Baill’s definitions and explanations sink the project. Peter Paone’s Someone’s Topiary and Victor Gabriel Gilbert’s Poppies in a Field both effectively demonstrate exciting ways that red and green can offset and enhance each other, but the crucial term complementary is missing, as are the other two complementary pairs (yellow/purple, orange/blue). Displaying silver and gold, the text claims that “shimmery shades that are perfectly polished are called metallic”—but any hue can shimmer, depending on material and light; those two are metallic because they’re metal, not because they’re shiny. The explanation that two primaries mix to make each secondary receives a mere Venn diagram as demonstration. Two reddish-brown goldfish by Roy Lichtenstein are nowhere near a primary red but are absurdly called “rosy” and “primary.” Minuscule print and thumbnails arranged in columns (not rows) in the backmatter demand extra effort to identify the works. A stumbling author’s note mentions the Black Lives Matter movement because “privilege and injustice [are] inherent in skin color,” the word inherent implying that racial justice is impossible and that racism’s caused by literal hue.
Little eyes will like the stimulating visuals. Skip the words.
(project ideas, works cited) (Informational picture book. 2-6)