Full
Text Review(s) *"Well
written and beautifully illustrated volume, the life of Mexican artist Diego
Rivera best known for murals depicting working people is introduced in free
verse. Similar in format to Bernier-Grand’s
Frida: Viva
la vida! Long Live Life! (2007)
and
César:
Sí, Se Puede!- Yes, We
Can! (2004), the book offers a
chronological sequence of poems, each appearing either on a single page
accompanied by a small illustration or on a left-hand page with a full-page
picture on the right. Almost all written in first-person from the artist’s
point of view, the poems convey information succinctly within a context of
colorful narrative and clearly expressed emotion. Each poem stands alone, yet
some words, ideas, and images recur, creating an interconnected sequence. A
three-page appended biography clarifies and amplifies the information in the
verse. Also appended are a glossary, and chronology, a source bibliography,
notes, and quotes from the artist. Apart from four reproductions of
Rivera’s paintings and one photo of the artist, the illustrations are
mixed-media pictures by Diaz. Depicting Rivera and his world, these iconic
images glow with warmth, light, and color. In the backgrounds, some scenes
incorporate imagery from Aztec art, which Rivera collected. A lively verse
portrait illuminated with incandescent
illustrations."STARRED
REVIEW
Booklist,
February 15, 2009
"A big
figure who created big art, Diego Rivera remains one of Mexico’s most
fascinating characters a half-century after his death. Bernier-Grand chronicles
his dramatic and turbulent life in thirty-four free-verse poems written in
Rivera’s own voice, covering his early artistry, his travel to Europe as
his country underwent revolution, his lovers and wives, including fellow artist
Frida Kahlo, his political leanings, and his artistic labors. Though the verses
are somewhat prosaic in style, they’re evocative snapshots of a roaring
and eventful life, and there’s honest acknowledgement of Rivera’s
flaws and fictionalizing tendencies. The book includes a few reprinted images of
Rivera’s own art, but the majority of the illustrations are Diaz’s
sharply edged, glowingly hued profiles. The elaborate patterning in their
backgrounds sometimes recalls papel
picado, but the effect’s subtlety of hue allows it to
enhance the main figures without overwhelming them; the iconic images of Diego
and his circle dominate each illustrative vignette or page. The book closes with
substantial additional material, including, a biographical overview that
addresses some of the tension between fact and self-created myth in
Rivera’s life story, a glossary, a chronology, a list of source materials,
endnotes, and a collection of quotations from Rivera himself. That’s a
refreshing amount of rigor for a verse account, so this will be particularly
useful as a starting point for studying the artist, and it’s a welcome
step up from Winter’s
Diego."
The Bulletin of
the Center for Children’s Books, April 2009
"This
treatment of the Mexican muralist is a companion piece to Bernier-Grand’s
Frida (2007), but bears more resemblance to the author’s César:
¡Si, se puede! (2004, both Marshall Cavendish). All three titles employ
free verse, but Frida’s story is told visually through her own art; Diego
and César exhibit Diaz’s stylized digital and mixed-media
compositions, his recognizable figures rendered in profile, with a prominent,
single eye. Diaz is in top form here with luminous scenes drenched in color,
layered with indigenous and political motifs, and sensitive to the various art
styles his subject explored. However, only four reproductions of Rivera’s
work are included, which barely scratch the surface. That said, author and
artist provide a nuanced and spirited look at a complex individual.
Bernier-Grand’s first-person poems introduce Rivera as storyteller, one
who proceeds to spin true and fabricated details. Fact and fiction are sorted in
the meticulous end matter, which includes a biographical overview, sources,
endnotes, quotations by the artist, and a photograph. One emerges with a sense
of Rivera’s genius, devilish personality, and struggles both in relation
to accepting financial support from oppressive governments and in his capacity
to be, by turns, self-centered or tender with the many women and children in his
life. Young people will be surprised and entertained by this accessible,
arresting portrait."
School Library
Journal, April 2009
"Bernier-Grand
(who wrote about Frida Kahlo in Frida: ¡Viva la Vida! / Long Live Life!)
uses free verse to chronicle the childhood of Mexican muralist Diego Rivera,
before highlighting the passions—art, women, and politics—of his
adult life. ("Critics said my Mexican cubism was interesting. / I could
live on it. The rich bought it. / It hung where the poor couldn’t afford
to go. / That wasn’t what I wanted. / I resigned cubism.") These
vignettes are appropriately accompanied by Diaz’s vibrantly colored
mixed-media silhouettes and occasionally—and to great
effect—Rivera’s own paintings. This offering makes an excellent
companion to the poet’s previous books, not just because Frida Kahlo and
Rivera were (twice) married, nor yet because Diaz and Bernier-Grand also
collaborated on César, a verse biography of César Chávez, but
because all these books celebrate the symbiotic relationship between art and
politics in Latino culture. Extensive back matter—glossary, chronology,
bibliography, notes, and quotes—is
appended."
The Horn Book
Magazine, May/June 2009
"This emotionally charged collection of poems
tells the story of Rivera’s life like never before. The paintings are
colorfully reminiscent of Rivera’s art but have a more dreamlike quality,
as do the poems, which are told in first person, as if he were speaking aloud.
Four reproductions of Rivera’s paintings and one photo of the artist are
included, and the book concludes with additional information on his life, a
glossary, a chronology, a bibliography, and a page of
quotations."
Book Links (a
supplement to Booklist), October 2009