SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13 , 2022. THE WASHINGTON POST EZ RE C11
BY HARRISON SMITH
Ashley Bryan, a celebrated chil-
dren’s author whose joyous, vivid-
ly illustrated picture books pulsed
with the rhythms of modern po-
etry, African folk tales and Black
American spirituals, died Feb. 4 at
his niece’s home in Sugar Land,
Tex., outside Houston. He was 98.
He had congestive heart fail-
ure, said H. Nichols B. Clark, the
founding director of the Ashley
Bryan Center in Islesford, Maine,
where Mr. Bryan lived year-round
before joining his niece in Texas
about three years ago.
Along with writers and illustra-
tors such as Ezra Jack Keats, John
Steptoe and the late Eloise Green-
field and Jerry Pinkney, Mr. Bryan
helped fill a void in the historical-
ly White realm of American chil-
dren’s literature, crafting works
that treated Black characters with
dignity rather than disdain.
“He had this way of connecting
our current life, specifically Black
children’s current lives, to the
lives of our ancestors,” said author
Jason Reynolds, the Library of
Congress’s National Ambassador
for Young People’s Literature.
“But he had this way about him as
a person that made it feel inclu-
sive to every kid. That we could
celebrate Black children and the
history and legacy of Black Ameri-
cans in this country, and that it
was something for all of us to
celebrate.”
Mr. Bryan wrote or illustrated
more than 70 children’s books
over six decades, in addition to
making paintings, linoleum block
prints, collage works, hand pup-
pets and elaborate stained glass
windows, which he crafted from
sea glass that washed up near his
home on Little Cranberry Island,
overlooking Acadia National Park
in Maine.
“Each day, I look forward to
finding the child in myself who’s
anxious to create something new
and wonderful,” he told The
Washington Post last year, on the
eve of his 98th birthday. “I always
have ideas whirling in my head.”
Mr. Bryan was rejected from art
schools as a young man because of
his race — he was Black, the son of
immigrants from British colonial
Antigua — but went on to win
some of the top prizes in Ameri-
can children’s literature, includ-
ing the Laura Ingalls Wilder
Award, now known as the Chil-
dren’s Literature Legacy Award.
Announcing that honor in
2009, prize chair Cathryn Mercier
said Mr. Bryan had “filled chil-
dren’s literature with the beats of
story, the echoes of poetry, the
transcendence of African Ameri-
can spirituals, the beauty of art
and the satisfaction of a tale well
told,” inspiring others “to tell,
paint, sing and weave their own
stories for generations to come.”
Mr. Bryan also received the
Coretta Scott King-Virginia Ham-
ilton Lifetime Achievement
Award from the American Library
Association, as well as a Newbery
Honor for “Freedom Over Me”
(2016), in which he used an 1828
auction document to tell the story
of 11 enslaved people in the Ameri-
can South.
The book “sugarcoats nothing,”
wrote New York Times reviewer
Jabari Asim, “frequently invoking
the language of commerce to ex-
pose the brutality of human traf-
ficking.” He added that Mr. Bryan
chronicled the indignity of slavery
while also sharing his protago-
nists’ hopes, dreams and fight
against captivity. “All we’ve
known as slaves is work,” one
character says. “Work, from dawn
to dusk, in rain, cold, stifling heat.”
Mr. Bryan shifted his style de-
pending on the story he was tell-
ing, moving from woodcut or lino-
leum block prints to watercolor
and acrylic paint. For his 2003
book “Beautiful Blackbird,” he il-
lustrated a Zambian folk story by
turning to paper collage, using his
mother’s needlepoint scissors to
cut avian characters out of bright-
ly colored paper, without using a
stencil or drawing lines on the
page.
“He always told me, ‘I feel my
mother’s hand guiding me,’” said
his longtime editor Caitlyn
Dlouhy, who runs her own im-
print at Simon & Schuster’s Athe-
neum Books. “He’d just hold the
paper up and start cutting, and
he’d have a perfectly shaped wing,
the perfect beak, whatever he was
creating for Blackbird and the
other birds in that book.”
Mr. Bryan traveled frequently
to Kenya, where he helped build
schools and libraries, and often
turned to the continent’s art and
folklore for inspiration. Commis-
sioned to illustrate a selection of
African folk tales in the early
1970 s, he asked to rewrite the text,
noting that the stories were told in
the stilted language of ethno-
graphic research. When his pub-
lisher obliged, he released his first
picture book as a writer-illustra-
tor, “The Ox of the Wonderful
Horns and Other African Folk-
tales.”
His later works included “The
Dancing Granny” (1977), a be-
loved Afro-Caribbean tale involv-
ing the mischievous Spider Anan-
se, and “Beat the Story-Drum,
Pum-Pum” (1987), a selection of
five Nigerian stories, with illustra-
tions that evoked traditional tex-
tiles and woodblock prints.
Many of his illustrations ac-
companied song lyrics or poetry,
reflecting the interests of an artist
who was known to sprinkle his
conversations with verses by
Shakespeare, Christina Rossetti,
Robert Burns and Rainer Maria
Rilke, whom he read in the origi-
nal German after studying at the
University of Freiburg on a Ful-
bright grant.
Addressing audiences at
schools or libraries, Mr. Bryan
would kick off his readings by
conducting a call-and-response
recitation of Langston Hughes’s
“My People,” a celebration of com-
munal storytelling. “Ashley
would, as Black folks say, take his
audiences to church, often bring-
ing them to their feet in mere
minutes,” said one of his collabo-
rators, poet and author Nikki
Grimes.
In a phone interview, Dlouhy
said Mr. Bryan’s young readers
would sometimes follow him off
the stage and down the hall, walk-
ing behind him “like ducklings,
smiles as big as their faces could
contain,” as he continued to recite
a poem or tell a story.
Even as he moved into other
forms of art-making, children re-
mained his primary audience.
“Quite frankly,” said Clark, the
Bryan Center director, “he’d rath-
er talk to a kindergartner than an
agent who might promote his ca-
reer.”
The second of six children, Ash-
ley Frederick Bryan was born in
Manhattan on July 13, 1923. His
mother was a homemaker and
seamstress, and his father was a
printer who served in the British
army during World War I.
Raised in the Bronx, Mr. Bryan
grew up drawing on scraps of
paper that his father brought
home from work; by age 6, he was
making his own picture books,
binding the pages himself and
distributing them at school.
During the Depression, he at-
tended free art and music classes
sponsored by the Works Progress
Administration and studied un-
der artist Romare Bearden, a
friend of one of his teachers. En-
couraged by his instructors, he
applied to art schools but was
rejected out of hand.
“It would be a waste to give a
scholarship to a colored person,”
he recalled one admissions officer
saying.
He was ultimately accepted at
the Cooper Union in Manhattan,
which had a blind admission
process, but found his education
interrupted by World War II.
Drafted into the Army in 1943 at
age 19, he was deployed to Europe
as a stevedore in an all-Black unit.
Mr. Bryan rarely spoke about
his years in what was then a racial-
ly segregated military, where he
concluded that German prisoners
of war were treated better than
Black soldiers. But he chronicled
his military service in his most
recent picture book, “Infinite
Hope” (2019), which featured
some of the sketches that he took
while overseas, including draw-
ings that he made on Omaha
Beach after D-Day, using art ma-
terials hidden in his helmet.
“Watching Bryan generously
transform the bittersweet into
beauty is watching the meaning of
art,” a critic wrote for Kirkus.
Mr. Bryan returned to New
York and studied philosophy at
Columbia University, in what he
described as “an attempt to un-
derstand why men make war.” He
graduated in 1950, the same year,
he was commissioned to do the
artwork for an edition of Richard
Wright’s memoir “Black Boy,”
which marked the first time his
illustrations were published in a
book.
He later continued his studies
in Europe, attending the Univer-
sity of Aix-Marseille in France and
sketching the Spanish cellist Pab-
lo Casals at a concert in the town
of Prades. While trying to capture
the movement of the musicians’
bow strokes, he unlocked a gestur-
al new approach to art. “I found
the rhythm of my hand,” he later
told a Columbia interviewer.
Mr. Bryan said he focused in-
creasingly on Black subjects after
reading a 1965 Saturday Review
essay, “The All-White World of
Children’s Books,” by Nancy Lar-
rick. He later illustrated poems by
Hughes and Nikki Giovanni, in
addition to crafting “Walk Togeth-
er Children” (1974), a collection of
African American spirituals that
included notes to help children
play the songs on a recorder.
Over the decades, he also
taught at institutions including
the Dalton School and Queens
College in New York, Philadelphia
College of Art (now University of
the Arts) and Dartmouth College
in Hanover, N.H., where he retired
in 1988 as a professor emeritus of
art. In 2008, he was honored as a
“Library Lion” by the New York
Public Library, alongside writers
Edward Albee, Nora Ephron and
Salman Rushdie.
Survivors include a brother.
His friend Reynolds, the author
and literary ambassador, de-
scribed Mr. Bryan as “a sharpen-
ing stone,” an artistic sage who
freely offered wisdom to writers,
readers and anyone else who
stopped by his island home to
chat.
“I remember one time we were
having breakfast, and I asked him,
‘How does a man live to be so old?’
He said honestly, ‘I don’t have any
survival skills. I don’t really know
how to cook or clean. All I know is
I wake up every morning and I
make art.’
“His life-giving ability,” Reyn-
olds continued, “had everything
to do with his choice to do the
thing that he loved every single
day.”
ASHLEY BRYAN, 98
Author of children’s picture books
that celebrated Black life and history
Obituaries
DUDLEY M. BROOKS/THE WASHINGTON POST
Ashley Bryan reads during a storytelling hour at Montpelier Arts Center in Laurel, Md., in 1998. His
joyous works helped fill a void in the historically White realm of American children’s literature.
DEATH NOTICE
DALTON ARNOLDANDREWS
PeacefullypassedawayonChristmasEve,
December 24,2021.Daltonwasbornin
Philadelphia,PAonNovember8,1925.She
grewupin ahousenamed“OntheRocks”in
Westport,CTbythebanksoftheSaugatuck
RiverwithherbrotherWilliamandherparents,
LaurenandAnneHughesArnold.Shegradu-
atedfromSt.ThomasSchoolforGirlsand
attendedVassarduringthewar.Daltonwas
invitedbyafamilyfriend,thethenGovernor
ofAlaska,toamemorablesummerexploring
theterritoryfollowedbyastintofteaching
skiinginSunValley,Idaho.In1969,Dalton
marriedPrestonAndrews,andin1972,she
beganstudyingforherNursingdegreeat the
UniversityofMaryland.Forthemajorityof
hercareer,DaltonworkedatSibleyHospital
inWashington,DC.Followingthepassingof
herhusband,Daltonbecameoneofthefirst
residentsof thethenrecentlybuiltMaplewood
ParkPlace,OldGeorgetownRoadinBethesda,
MD.Heresheflourished,makingnumerous
friendsandcontributions,includingservingon
manyBoardsandCommittees.Sheis survived
byherdaughter,Catharine;herson,Lauren;
hernieceLucyArnoldReymandt;andher
twograndchildren,AnneandRob.Thiscoming
Spring,thefamilyis planningaMemorialSer-
vicewiththedispositionoftheashesatSt.
Luke’sEpiscopalChurch,Bethesda,MD.Any
contributionsforhermemoryshouldbemade
toPoplarSpringAnimalSanctuary,P.OBox
507,Poolesville,MD20837.Tel: 301-428-8129.
Website:https://www.animalsanctuary.org/
ANDREWS
Dr.RAYMONDISAACBAND
Dr.RaymondIsaacBand,Baltimore/Wash-
ington psychiatrist and psychoanalyst,
passedawayat theageof 97of congestive
heartfailureonJanuary18, 2022 in Bethes-
da,Maryland.RaymondBandwasbornon
May2, 1924toGussieandLouisBandin
Chicago,Illinois.ThefamilymovedtoIvy
CityinNortheastWashington,DC,where
theyownedandoperatedBand’sGrocery
Storefor 24 years.Raymondattended
GeorgeWashingtonUniversityforbothcol-
legeandmedicalschool,fromwhichhe
graduatedin 1948at theageof 24.After
graduation,heservedintheUSarmyin
thechiefneurologysection,asaresident
physicianat Sheppard&EnochPrattHospi-
tal,andanAssistantProfessorof Neurology
at the University ofMaryland before
becomingapracticingpsychiatristin Balti-
moreandthenWashingtonDC.Duringhis
longcareerheservedin anumberof other
rolesincludingasateachinganalystat the
Baltimore-DCInstituteforPsychoanalysis
andasaStateDepartmentconsultant.
Heremainedcommittedandinvolvedwith
manypsychiatricsocietiesservingas presi-
dentandmemberof variousorganizations
includingtheAmericanPsychiatricAsso-
ciation,AmericanPsychoanalyticSociety,
WashingtonPsychiatricSociety,andBalti-
more-DistrictofColumbiaSocietyfor
Psychoanalysis.Hecontinued to see
patientsuntiltheageof88.Rayloved
smokinghispipeandlisteningtoclassical
musicinhisstudyathomeaswellas
devoting many yearsdelvinginto the
nuancesofUlyssesasamemberofa
JamesJoycestudygroup.Heissurvived
byhiswifePeggyAntesBand(married
62 years),sonLaurence(Janet),daughter
Deirdre(Thomas)andgrandchildrenOliver,
Isabelle,ConorandRyan.Raymondspent
hislastremainingdayssurroundedbyloved
oneswhilesharingsmilesandmemories.
Servicesprivate.
BAND
When the
need arises,
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find youinthe
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To be seen in the
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DEATH NOTICE
Circone,KathyJohnson
NieceandNephews:AdamKallan,Christine
Rodeghero-Smith(Darin),MikeRodeghero
(Mindy)
GrandniecesandNephews:Kathleen,Mark,
Nikolai,Max,Aiden
Somanylovelycousins
Marylovedeverythingabouttheocean,had
akeensenseof humorandwaspassionate
abouttheenvironmentandherprogressive
politics.Shelovedtennisandwasnotinter-
estedinformality.Herfamilymeantthe
worldto her.
Marywasagraduateof St.Joseph’sNursing
CollegeandMountSaintMary’sUniversity.
SheworkedforyearsasanurseatShady
GroveandSuburbanHospitalscaringfor
countlesspatients.Laterinhercareer,
sheworkedwithrefugeesandat-riskyoung
adultsgivingthemanopportunitytotrain
asnursingassistants.Sheretiredtoher
beachhousewherefamilyandfriendswere
warmlywelcomed.Sheeventuallyreturned
toGaithersburgtobeclosertofamilywhen
shebecameill.
Marylovedthesmallteamof nurses’aides
(Jenny,Jessi,Maria,RoxyandUdy)that
helpedtocareforherinherfinalyear.
Theselovelywomenwereagreatcomfortto
Maryandherfamily.Theysymbolizedand
reflectedbacktoherthebeautifulnursing
careshegaveto somanyovertheyears.
Marydidnotwantatraditionalfuneral.After
asmallprivatefamilyviewing,shewillbe
crematedandherremainslaidtorestin
theplacessheloved. ThisincludesLake
Needwood,theAtlanticandWilmingtonwith
herbrotherandparents.
In lieuof flowers,donationscanbemadeto
TheSierraClub.
MARYMARGARETGLENNEYDENEAU
5/26/1940-1/31/2022
OfGaithersburg,MD.BorninWilmington,
Illinoisanddiedpeacefullyin hersleepafter
afulllifewelllived.
Precededin deathbylongtimepartner
Richard‘’Dick’’Muranaka;belovedparents
Margaret and William Glenney; brother
Edward Glenney;AuntHelenCremeens;
Cousins Richard,Tim,andThomasCre-
meens,andamyriadofbelovedAunts,
UnclesandCousins.
Survivedby:
Children: Teresa Deneau,David Deneau
(PartnerBarbara,deceased),JudyTorrance
(SpouseRoy),WilliamDeneau(PartnerTracy)
Grandchildren:Lindsey,Stephanie(Spouse
Matt),Jose,Anna,CarreyAnn,Jabari
Formerhusband:RonaldDeneau
Sisters: Kathleen Kallan and Margaret
Rodeghero(spouseDennis)andtheCre-
meenscousinswhomshelovedlikesiblings:
Mike,Jim,MaryAnnMudron,Maureen
DENEAU
DEATH NOTICE
BERLIN
EDITHELINORBERLIN
On Sunday,February6, 2022,
in Silver Spring, Maryland.
Beloved mother of Marcia
Radinand JeffreyBerlin,ador-
ing grandmotherof fourand
great-grandmother of two.
Edithwas bornin Cleveland,Ohio,in1919,
earnedaMaster’sDegreein Library Sci-
ence,and workedas alibrarianduring
World WarIIand, later,inthe Montgomery
CountyPublicSchools.She livedin Ban-
nockburn,LeisureWorld, andRiderwood
Village,and treasuredthe friendsshe had
in all threecommunities.She wasprede-
ceased in 2010by Seymour,her husband
of 70 years,withwhomshehadtraveled
extensivelyinretirement.Edithwasmany
wonderfulthings--unconditionallove,
smart,funny,patient,silly,loyal,good
sport,acomfortinillnessandgrief.She
wasamazedandproudtohavereached
theageof102.Aprivateburialwillbeheld
in her honor.
http://www.sagelbloomfield.com
BLOOMFIELD
DOROTHYREESEBLOOMFIELD
(Age101)CAPT., U.S.PUBLICHEALTH
SERVICE,RET.
OnFebruary9,2022.Mother
of AlanE. Reese,widowof Ev-
eretteDixieReeseand Arthur
I. Bloomfield.Friendsmaycall
at St. Jane de ChantalChurch
9701 Old GeorgetownRoad,
Bethesdaon February15, 2022from 10
a.m.to 11 a.m.Massof ChristianBurialto
followat 11 a.m.Entombmentat Gateof
HeavenCemetery.Memorial contributions
may be madeto SOME(So OthersMay Eat)
70 OStreet,NW,Washington,D.C. 20001or
acharityof yourchoice.Full Obituaryat:
http://www.DeVolFuneralHome.com
BRANCH
RICHARDH. BRANCH“Rick”“Ricky”
(Age71)
OnWednesday,February2,2022,Rick
Branchdiedafteralongstrugglewith
dementiaathishomeinBurke,Virginia.
HewasbornonApril14, 1950 inTampa,
Floridato Ruthand HerbertBranch.Rick
workedas afederal law enforcementof-
ficerin Washington,DC for 23 yearsuntil
his retirementin 1995.Rick is survivedby
his wifeSandra(Stepich)Branch;daughter
Alex(Branch)Shifflett;son NickBranch;
brothersBob and Fred Branch;and cousin
Patty Branch.The familywill be honoring
Rick’slife privately.Inlieu of flowers,me-
morialdonationsmaybe madein Rick’s
nameto the HouseCallsorganizationat
InovaFairfaxHospital, 8110 Gatehouse
Road,Falls Church,VA 22042,or to The
DementiaSocietyof America,PO Box 600,
Doylestown,PA 18901.
BROOKS
KIMBERLYANN BROOKS(Age65)
Belovedsisterto PriscillaJoseph,Caroline
Montagueand DavidBrooks,specialfriend
RusselKlip,and Belovedauntto threegen-
erationsof niecesandnephewspassed
awayon January29, 2022.Kim wasborn
in Washington,DC in 1956,grewup in Falls
Church,Virginiaand aftercollegeresided
in Frederick,Maryland.In her adultyears,
Kim committedto her field of study,geron-
tologyand the healingpowerof massage.
Kimwasacompassionatesupporterof
peoplewithParkinson’sdisease,finding
manywaysto bringqualityof life and com-
fort to thosesufferingfromParkinson’s.
One of Kim’sgreat accomplishmentsin her
fieldwasteachingavery well-respected
Parkinson’sWellnessTherapy Method.
Kim was precededin deathby her parents,
Ernestand PollyannaBrooks,sister-in-law
MelanieBrooksand brothers-in-lawDavid
Josephand DavidMontague.Kim was also
afiercedefenderof the rightsof animals,
believerin humanetreatmentto all living
creaturesand ahad adeep compassion
for the ageing.Amemorialserviceis being
plannedfor laterin the spring.
http://www.murphyfuneralhomes.com
WILLIAMPERRYCLEMENTS"Bill"
May22, 1928 -January31, 2022
BorninArlington,VA,sonofAndrewCor-
neliusClements,formerSheriffofArlington
Co.1920-1924,andEulaV. PlaugherofStras-
burg,VA.Hehadtwobrothersandasister
whopredeceasedhim:J. ElwoodClements,
alsoaSheriffofArlingtonCounty.; Andrew
C.Clements,Jr.;andElvaLeeKingsford.He
is predeceasedbyhisnieceJoanLaskerand
nephewJohnSeiber,andsurvivedbyhis
nephewsandtheirfamilies:SteveKingsford;
Andrew,Leigh,andKuiperClements;hisniece
LynnClementsHorsky;andhisgreatnephews
andnieces:Jay, Chrissy,andKennySeiber.
Billwasasoft-spoken,kindman.Hemain-
tainedacongenialattitudethroughlife.He
graduatedfromW&LHighSchoolin 1946.
HeservedArlingtonCountyasawatermeter
reader,andclerkedfortheUSPostalService
in hisyouth.Formostof hiscareerheworked
forMelpar(nowRaytheon),aUSdefense
contractor,for over 40 yearsin thedistribution
department.HeresidedinBallstonforhis
entirelife.Amemorialburialservicewillbe
heldat ColumbiaGardensCemetery,Thursday,
February17,at 10a.m.in Arlington,VA.Inlieu
offlowers,donationsmadebymadetothe
AmericanHeartAssociation,heart.org.
CLEMENTS
DEATH NOTICE
CRAUN
LORICRAUN
On Wednesday,February9, 2022of Fairfax,
VA.Belovedwifeof 33 yearsof Douglas
Craun;lovingmotherof Will Craun.Mass
of ChristianBurialwill be held at HolySpirit
CatholicChurch, 5121 WoodlandWayAn-
nandale,VAatalater date.Pleasecheck
the funeral homewebsitefor updates.In
lieu offlowers,memorialcontributions
maybemadetoINOVAHealthFoundation
http://www.foundation.inova.org.
http://www.fairfaxmemorialfuneralhome.com
DELEON
LYNN ANNDELEON
OnMonday,February7, 2022
LynnAnnDeLeonofGaithers-
burg,MD.Belovedwifeof 45
yearsto AllenP. DeLeon;lov-
ingmotherof ChristineLynn
White(Jamie),Kevin DeLeon
(Lana),RyanDeLeonand TimothyDeLeon
(Maddie);sisterof KathleenStearn,Mau-
reenFranke(Anthony)and EileenBerns;
grandmotherof Katherine,Casey,Penny
and Dylan.Friendsmaycall at DeVol Fu-
neral Home,10East DeerPark Drive,Gaith-
ersburg,MD 20877onWednesday,Feb-
ruary16, 2022from2to4p.m. Massof
CatholicBurialwill be offeredat St. Mary’s
CatholicChurch,520 Veirs Mill Road,Rock-
ville,MD20852on Thursday,February17,
2022 at 10:30a.m. If desiredmemorial
contributionsmaybemadetoHolyCross
HealthFoundation-CancerCenter,1 500
ForestGlenRoad,SilverSpring,MD 20910
(301)-754-7000(www.holycrosshealth.org)
Pleasesign familyguestbookat
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