Floyd Cooper | |
Birth Date: | 8 January 1956 |
Birth Place: | Tulsa, OK |
Death Place: | Easton, PA |
Occupation: | Author and Illustrator |
Nationality: | American |
Genre: | Children's picture books |
Notableworks: | Grandpa's Face by Eloise Greenfield by Carole Boston Weatherford |
Awards: | Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award (2009, 2022) Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor (1994, 1995, 1999) Caldecott Honor (2022) |
Floyd Cooper (January 8, 1956July 15, 2021) was an American illustrator of children's books whose art frequently explored the African American experience.[1] He was based in Easton, Pennsylvania,[2] and worked with authors such as Jane Yolen, Nikki Grimes, Eloise Greenfield, Howard Bryant, Joyce Carol Thomas, and Bill Martin Jr, among others.[3] In all, he illustrated more than 100 titles.[1]
Floyd Donald Cooper Jr. was born in 1956 in Tulsa, Oklahoma, to Ramona (Williams) Cooper and Floyd Cooper Sr.[1] His mother was a beautician while his father built houses. Floyd grew up in low income housing and attended 11 different elementary schools.[1]
In school his teachers began to notice his illustrations and submitted his work to a scholarship committee. Floyd earned a scholarship to the University of Oklahoma, where he studied advertising.[1] [4] After graduating in 1978, Floyd worked for Hallmark Cards in Kansas City. He later moved to Manhattan where he struggled before he got his first contract with Penguin Books[5] Floyd's first illustrated book was published in 1988 and written by Eloise Greenfield.
He married Velma Hyatt Cooper and they had two sons, Kai and Dayton. He died on July 15, 2021 in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, of cancer.[1]
Cooper's artwork is known for using what he called an "oil erasure" subtractive technique, where he would "wash a board in oil paint and use a rubber eraser to methodically knead the paint away. He'd then create radiant images in soft, shimmering tones."[1]
Floyd won the Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award in 2009[6] and 2022.[7] He was also selected for the Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor in 1994,[8] 1995,[9] and 1999,[10] and a Caldecott Honor in 2022.[11]
Additionally, he won a Golden Kite Award for A Dance Like Starlight: One Ballerina’s Dream[12] and a Charlotte Zolotow Award for Max and the Tag-Along Moon written by Floyd himself.[13] Laura Charlotte received a Parents' Choice Award and a School Library Journal Best Books citation.[14]