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[Welcome] Hello {NAME}! This is the weekly email digest of the daily online journal [Brain Pickings]( by Maria Popova. If you missed last week's edition â 200 years of beloved writers on nature as an antidote to depression, Leibniz on how difference dignifies the world, and more â you can catch up [right here](. And if you find any value and joy in my labor of love, please consider supporting it with a [donation]( â I spend innumerable hours and tremendous resources on it each week, as I have been for fourteen years, and every little bit of support helps enormously. If you already donate: THANK YOU.
[Drawing on Walls: An Wondrous Illustrated Homage to Keith Haring, His Irrepressible Art of Hope, and His Beautiful Bond with Children](
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Growing in Bulgaria, one of my most cherished objects was also one of the first fragments of American culture to enter our home after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the rise of the Iron Curtain â a small square desk calendar in a clear plastic clamshell, containing twelve illustrated cards, each vibrantly alive with tiny black-contoured figures dancing in various jubilant formations amid a festival of primary colors. I would look up to savor its mirth between math equations and domestic disquietudes. However gloomy a day I was having, however sunken my child-heart, these figures would transport me to a buoyant world of sunlit possibility. I knew nothing about their creator beyond the name on the back of the clamshell: Keith Haring (May 4, 1958âFebruary 16, 1990). I knew nothing about the bittersweet beauty of his courageous life, nothing about the tenacious activism behind his art, nothing about the enormous uninterrupted chain of human figures bonded in kinship, which he had painted on the remnants of the very wall whose collapse had placed this miniature monument to joy on my desk.
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Nearly three decades later, having traded Bulgaria for Brooklyn by some improbable existential acrobatics, I encountered Haringâs work again in a [magnificent mural]( he had painted for a young peopleâs club in New York City in the final year of his twenties, not long before his death, which my friends at [Pioneer Works]( had resurrected and brought to our neighborhood. The same rush of irrepressible gladness poured into the grownup heart from twenty-five-foot wall as had poured into the child-heart from the five-inch calendar. I grew attuned to the echoes of his sensibility bellowing down the corridor of time, reverberating strongly in the work of [established artists]( in my own community.
Long before he moved to Brooklyn in pursuit of his own calling, poet Matthew Burgess had a parallel experience of Haringâs world-expanding art, which he first encountered on the cover of a Christmas record at fourteen, living behind the Golden Curtain of suburban Southern California as a budding artist and young gay man trying to find himself. âFor those of us who grew up before the internet became ubiquitous, a bright fragment from the outer world can feel like an important discovery â and a call,â Burgess writes in the authorâs note to what became his serenade to the artist who opened minds and world of possibility for so many.
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A decade into teaching poetry in public schools, Burgess encountered Haringâs work afresh in a retrospective at the Brooklyn Museum. After mesmeric hours in the galleries, he wandered into the museum bookshop and went home with a copy of Haringâs published journals, which he devoured immediately. On its pages, he realized that the special native sympathy between children and Haringâs art is not an accident of his line and color but at the very center of his spirit. In an entry from July 7, 1986, Haring writes:
[2e292385-dc1c-4cfe-b95e-845f6f98c2ec.png]Children know something that most people have forgotten. Children possess a fascination with their everyday existence that is very special and would be very helpful to adults if they could learn to understand and respect it.
Having previously composed [Enormous Smallness]( â the wondrous picture-book biography of E.E. Cummings, another artist who so passionately believed that âit takes courage to grow up and become who you really areâ â Burgess was impelled to invite young people into Keith Haringâs singular art and the large heart from which it sprang. And so [Drawing on Walls: A Story of Keith Haring]( ([public library]( was born â a splendid addition to [the most inspiring picture-book biographies of cultural heroes](.
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Burgessâs tender words, harmonized by muralist and illustrator Josh Cochranâs ebullient art, follow the young Keith from his childhood in small-town Pennsylvania, drawing at the kitchen table with his dad and dipping his little sisterâs palms in paint to make her a mobile of handprints, to his improbable path to New York City.
[drawingonwalls_haring5.jpg?resize=680%2C447](
One fateful day, home for the holidays from Pittsburg, where he had gone to study commercial art but had grow disillusioned with the prescriptive form, hungry âto be spontaneous and free,â Haring chanced upon [The Art Spirit]( â Robert Henriâs 1923 masterwork, which would go on to influence generation of artists as sundry as Georgia OâKeeffe and David Lynch. âRise up if it kills you,â Henri had [written to OâKeeffeâs best friend](. âIâm for the person who takes the bit in his teeth & goes after what he believes in.â Henriâs book â an invitation, an incantation, to âdo whatever you do intenselyâ â invigorated the young artist to take the bit of his own talent and unexampled creative vision in his teeth and go toward that intensity.
After hitchhiking across the country with his treasured copy of The Spirit of Art, he went to New York City.
[drawingonwalls_haring25.jpg?resize=680%2C453](
At twenty, he enrolled in the School of Visual Arts. (Cochran, whose illustrations bring Haringâs life to life in a rare acrobatic triumph of honoring another artistâs art in art that is both deliberately referential and thoroughly original, now teaches at the School of Visual Arts â a lovely testament to Robert Henriâs conviction that âall any man can hope to do is to add his fragment to the whole.â)
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One day, he foraged some rolls of paper lying in the gutter between the bustling New York sidewalk and the bustling New York street, and spontaneously âbegan making bigger and bigger pictures.â
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Burgess writes:
[2e292385-dc1c-4cfe-b95e-845f6f98c2ec.png]Keith especially liked painting on the floor by the open door where the sunlight poured in.
People passing on the street would stop to watch or talk with him about what he was making. Keith loved it!
He didnât believe that some people understand art while others donât â or that art should be hidden away in galleries, museums, and private collections.
Keith wanted to communicate with as many people as possible. âThe public has a right to art⦠Art is for everybody.â
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Tracing Haringâs inviting self-discovery on vacant subway billboards and graffiti-populated walls, Burgess affirms this credo by spontaneously breaking into his own art-form â the delightful surprise of the bookâs sole verse:
[2e292385-dc1c-4cfe-b95e-845f6f98c2ec.png]Maybe it makes them smile,
maybe it makes them think,
maybe it inspires them to draw
or dance or write or sing.
[drawingonwalls_haring31.jpg?resize=680%2C453](
Meanwhile, we see the bower of the young artistâs imagination grow decorated with the experiences of a life fully lived â he falls in love, starts a club in a church basement on St. Markâs Place with his friends, discovers the vibrant graffiti culture of Alphabet City, listens to his boyfriendâs music as he paints and they cook together.
[drawingonwalls_haring9.jpg?resize=680%2C644](
Like artist Agnes Martin and [the astonishing array of employments]( by which she sustained herself as she revolutionized art, he takes a series of odd jobs to survive in New York â bike messenger and sandwich-maker and gallery assistant in Soho and wildflower picker in Jersey and always, always his favorite: drawing with children at a Brooklyn daycare.
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All the while, he keeps drawing on walls, savoring that small, enormous moment when a stranger pauses mid-stride in this unstoppable city for a colorful moment of unbidden wonder. Burgess writes:
[2e292385-dc1c-4cfe-b95e-845f6f98c2ec.png]For Keith, this was what art was all about â the moment when people see it and respond.
At last, four years after leaping into the glorious uncertainty of life as a young artist in New York City, his big breakthrough came â a major solo exhibition at a Soho gallery. It tipped a Rube Goldberg machine of opportunities and invitations, making the world his canvas â from the wall of an Italian monastery to the Berlin Wall to the wall.
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Burgess writes:
[2e292385-dc1c-4cfe-b95e-845f6f98c2ec.png]But no matter how busy he became or where in the world he went, he always made time for children.
Keith understood kids and they understood him.
There was an unspoken bond between them.
And since children often asked him to draw on their t-shirts, skateboards, and jeans, he always kept a black marker handy.
[drawingonwalls_haring15.jpg?resize=680%2C662](
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In the remaining seven years of his life, as the art world grew to lavish Haring with recognition and plaudit, his drawings would come to cover the walls of orphanages and hospitals and daycare centers. When he spent five days painting the wall of a Chicago high school together with its 500 students, one walked up to him and said, with that special way children alone have of seeing into the heart of things and naming what is there without self-consciousness or pretense:
[2e292385-dc1c-4cfe-b95e-845f6f98c2ec.png]I can tell, by the way you paint, that you really love life.
Not long after that, Haringâs vivacity was stamped with the four letters that would spell certain death for so many young people of his generation. But even his AIDS diagnosis didnât stifle his exuberant love of life â it only amplified it. Burgess quotes Haringâs diary:
[2e292385-dc1c-4cfe-b95e-845f6f98c2ec.png]I appreciate everything that has happened, especially the gift of life I was given that has created a silent bond between me and children. Children can sense this âthingâ in me.
[drawingonwalls_haring17.jpg?resize=680%2C895](
[KeithHaring_painting.jpg?resize=680%2C522]
Keith Haring painting a wall at the Palaexpo Museum in Rome, 1984. (Photograph by Stefano Fontebasso de Martino; featured with permission.)
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[Drawing on Walls]( radiates that singular thingness with its sensitive, courageous homage to an artist whose short life cast a widening pool of light on so many, rippling across space and time. Complement it with Maya Angelouâs [lovely verses of courage for kids]( illustrated by Haringâs contemporary Jean-Michel Basquiat, and with the picture-book biographies of [Wangari Maathai]( [Maria Mitchell]( [Ada Lovelace]( [Louise Bourgeois]( [E.E. Cummings]( [Jane Goodall]( [Jane Jacobs]( [John Lewis]( [Frida Kahlo]( [Louis Braille]( [Pablo Neruda]( [Albert Einstein]( [Muddy Waters]( and [Nellie Bly]( then revisit E.E. Cummings â the subject of Burgessâs [first picture-book biography]( â on [the courage to be yourself](.
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Every week for fourteen years, I have been pouring tremendous time, thought, love, and resources into Brain Pickings, which remains free and is made possible by patronage. If you find any joy and solace in my labor of love, please consider supporting it with a donation. And if you already donate, from the bottom of my heart: THANK YOU. (If you've had a change of heart or circumstance and wish to rescind your support, you can do so [at this link](
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[Unforgetting a Forgotten Pioneer: How the 19th-Century Sculptor Edmonia Lewis Blazed the Path for Women of Color in the Fine Arts](
This essay is excerpted from .
[figuring_jacket_final.jpg]( the nineteenth-century sculptor Harriet Hosmer was [blazing the way for women in art]( while living as an openly queer person in Rome, she took special care to use her visibility as a platform for making others visible, her success as an opportunity-broadening instrument for the success of others. The pioneering astronomer [Maria Mitchell]( who was doing for women in science what Hosmer was doing in art and who met the sculptor while visiting Rome as Americaâs first international scientific celebrity, recounted that âif there came to any struggling artist in Rome the need of a friend, â and of the thousand artists in Rome very few are successful, â Harriet Hosmer was that friend.â
One of the young artists Hosmer took under her friendly wing was the sculptor Edmonia Lewis (July 4, 1844âSeptember 17, 1907) â the daughter of a Cherokee mother and a black father.
[EdmoniaLewis.jpg?resize=680%2C1133]
Edmonia Lewis
After growing up among Native Americans, Lewis had attended Oberlin College â not only the first university to admit women, but the first to admit women of ethnic minorities. But the university was no unbigoted idyll â when two white classmates became ill after sharing spiced wine served by Lewis, they accused her of poisoning them, even though she herself had drunk the wine without harm. Word spread beyond the liberal Oberlin campus. One evening, as Lewis was walking home from class by herself, she was attacked and forced into an open field, where she was brutally beaten and left for dead. Having barely survived, she â rather than her assailants â was arrested, an analog across the centuries to the same warping of justice that had befallen Medusa and Beatrice Cenci, the mytho-historical figures which Hosmer had sculpted into the masterpieces that made her famous.
Lewis was charged with poisoning her classmates on evidence as logically consistent and factually compelling as that on which [Johannes Keplerâs mother had been tried for witchcraft](. A prominent black lawyer, himself an Oberlin alumnus, defended her successfullyâshe was exonerated and eventually moved to Boston, where she studied with a successful sculptor before following in Hosmerâs footsteps and moving to Rome in her early thirties, at the same age that Hosmer had migrated there fifteen years earlier.
From Rome, Lewis wrote to her friend Lydia Maria Child â one of the eraâs most politically wakeful public voices, who had championed the young Hosmer when she had been Lewisâs age:
[2e292385-dc1c-4cfe-b95e-845f6f98c2ec.png]A Boston lady took me to Miss Hosmerâs studio. It would have done your heart good to see what a welcome I received. She took my hand cordially, and said, âOh, Miss Lewis, I am glad to see you here!â and then, while she still held my hand, there flowed such a neat little speech from her true lips!⦠Miss Hosmer has since called on me, and we often meet.
Lewis went on to become the nineteenth centuryâs only African American artist of mainstream recognition. In 1876, her 3,015- pound marble sculpture The Death of Cleopatra â a pinnacle of beauty and tragedy in a daring direct portrayal of unglamorized death â became a crowning curio at the first official Worldâs Fair in America, lauded as the most remarkable piece in the American section of the exhibition.
[EdmoniaLewis_DeathOfCleopatra.jpg?resize=680%2C907]
Edmonia Lewis: Death of Cleopatra (Smithsonian Institution)
Complement with Gwendolyn Brooks â the first black writer to win the Pulitzer Prize, at the age Lewis was when she moved to Rome â on [vulnerability as strength]( then revisit [the wondrous illustrated story of Wangari Maathai]( â the first African woman to win the Nobel Prize for her courageous endeavor to plant a million trees as an act of resistance and empowerment.
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[As an Antidote to Fear of Death, I Eat the Stars: Vintage Science Face Masks](
A small, coruscating delight: I have made a [series of face masks]( featuring wondrous centuries-old astronomical art and natural history illustrations I have restored and digitized from various archival sources over the years.
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Among them are treasures like the [Solar System quilt]( Ella Harding Baker spent seven years crafting in order to teach women astronomy long before they/we had access to formal education; the gorgeous 18th-century illustrations from [the worldâs first encyclopedia of medicinal plants]( that the young Elizabeth Blackwell painted to bail her husband out of debtorâs prison; the [astonishing drawings of celestial objects and phenomena]( the 19th-century French artist Ãtienne Léopold Trouvelot saw through Americaâs first world-class scientific instrument, Harvardâs Great Refractor Telescope; the trailblazing 18th-century artist Sarah Stoneâs stunning [illustrations of exotic, endangered, and now-extinct animals]( some [graphically spectacular depictions of how nature works]( from a 19th-century French physics textbook; Ernst Haeckelâs [heartbreak-fomented drawings of the otherworldly beauty of jellyfish]( and of course his [classic radiolaria]( that so inspired Darwin; William Saville Kentâs [pioneering artistic-scientific effort]( to bring the worldâs awareness and awe to the creatures of the Great Barrier Reef; and art from the German marine biologist Carl Chunâs epoch-making [Cephalopod Atlas]( â the worldâs first encyclopedia of creatures of the deep, which upended the longtime belief that life could not exist below 300 fathoms. (Because as the great poet Gwendolyn Brooks well knew, [âWherever life can grow, it will. It will sprout out, and do the best it can.â](
I originally made these masks just for myself and a handful of beloved humans, but they turned out so unexpectedly lovely that I decided to make them available to all who would delight in them. The manufacturer (society6, over whose production, pricing, and other practical elements I have no control â mine is only the conceptual element, fitted into their standard template; they print the fabrics, sew the masks, sell and ship them) is donating a portion of their proceeds to World Center Kitchen, helping to feed those most in need at times of crisis, and I am donating to The Nature Conservancy, stewarding the long-term sustenance of this entire improbable, irreplaceable planet, and the endeavor to build New Yorkâs most democratic institution of cosmic perspective, the cityâs [first public observatory](.
[eclipse_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](?curator=brainpicker)
Because of the maskâs particular folding pattern, some of the artwork came alive in a wholly new and unexpected way. My personal favorite â the original design I made for myself and my most beloved human â is the [total solar eclipse mask]( evocative of the opening line of astronomer and poet Rebecca Elsonâs magnificent [âAntidotes to Fear of Deathâ](
[2e292385-dc1c-4cfe-b95e-845f6f98c2ec.png]Sometimes as an antidote
To fear of death,
I eat the stars.
[milkyway_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
There is also the charmingly [shy, sleepy, fold-nesting octopus]( Haeckelâs [perfectly positioned jellyfish]( reminiscent of a plate from artist Judy Chicagoâs iconic [Dinner Party]( project; the [insurrectionist chameleon]( extending a tongue where we may not; the [holy coffee plant]( daily deity to so many; the chromatically ecstatic [spectra of various substances]( and the [glorious double rainbow]( from the 1868 French gem Les phénomènes de la physique; the [extinct poto-roo]( reminding us with its sweet nonexistent face atop ours that creatures do perish and are forever erased; and the [jubilant meteor shower]( for another serving of life-affirming star-eating.
[octopus_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[solarsystem_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[spider_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[fishes_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[jellyfish_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[snakes-by-sarah-stone-1790-masks.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[pomegranate_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[quince_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[coffee_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[radiolaria_mask.jpeg?resize=680%2C680](
[chameleon_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[potoroo_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[doublerainbow_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[spectra_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[poppy.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[saturn_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
[meteors_mask.jpg?resize=680%2C680](
See them all [here]( and keep an eye on the collection as I might be adding more designs between reading, writing, partaking of protests, and gardening.
[masks2.png?resize=680%2C618](
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donating=loving
Every week for fourteen years, I have been pouring tremendous time, thought, love, and resources into Brain Pickings, which remains free and is made possible by patronage. If you find any joy and solace in my labor of love, please consider supporting it with a donation. And if you already donate, from the bottom of my heart: THANK YOU. (If you've had a change of heart or circumstance and wish to rescind your support, you can do so [at this link](
monthly donation
You can become a Sustaining Patron with a recurring monthly donation of your choosing, between a cup of tea and a Brooklyn lunch. Â
one-time donation
Or you can become a Spontaneous Supporter with a one-time donation in any amount.
[Start Now]( [Give Now](
Partial to Bitcoin? You can beam some bit-love my way: 197usDS6AsL9wDKxtGM6xaWjmR5ejgqem7
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