Bound To Stay Bound

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 Augusta Savage : the shape of a sculptor's life
 Author: Nelson, Marilyn

 Publisher:  Little, Brown (2022)

 Dewey: 811
 Classification: Nonfiction
 Physical Description: 114 p., ill., 24 cm

 BTSB No: 670257 ISBN: 9780316298025
 Ages: 14-18 Grades: 9-12

 Subjects:
 Savage, Augusta, -- 1892-1962 -- Poetry
 Sculptors -- United States -- Poetry
 African American sculptors -- Poetry
 Biographical poetry

Price: $23.28

Summary:
A powerful biography in poems about Augusta Savage, the trailblazing artist and pillar of the Harlem Renaissance--with an afterword by the curator of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.


Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (+) (11/15/21)
   School Library Journal (00/04/22)
   Booklist (+) (10/15/21)
 The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (00/01/22)

Full Text Reviews:

School Library Journal - 04/01/2022 Gr 6 Up—Influential Harlem Renaissance artist Augusta Savage (1892–1962) rarely had the money to cast her art in bronze. Instead, what survives of her work, collected in major museums all over the country, is made of humble materials like plaster and clay. Her sculptures are realistic, insightful, and compassionate, much like the sure-footed poetry in this book by celebrated author Nelson. The artist's life—what is known of it—is related largely in the first person. A variety of poetic forms are precisely chosen to fit opportunities, setbacks, triumphs, and encounters with famous people, children, and a truly unhinged admirer. Poems are paired with archival photos and reproductions of artwork and often describe the act of creation and the puzzles that each subject poses—how to capture Marcus Garvey's "black light" or the clear-eyed determination of the young model for "Portrait Head of John Henry." One of the last poems describes Savage at the kitchen table in her home in rural Saugerties, NY, creating a bas-relief of a young dancer using plaster poured into a cookie sheet. This psychological portrait gathers the artist's natural talent, technical expertise, and love of teaching and creating, balanced against the restrictions she faced due to poverty, racism and misogyny, to leave readers with a woman as real and dimensional as the portraits she left the world. VERDICT A master poet breathes life and color into this portrait of a historically significant sculptor and her remarkable story.—Paula Willey - Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

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