Detail of large-scale illustration for “A Meeting of the Clan at a State Park,” article in New York Times, October 14, 1956. This detail, reproduced (with the full illustration) in our second anthology, The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora, is from a rejected version of the assignment found in the Flora family archives. The published version has similar elements, but repositioned.

Continue Reading... Meeting of the Clan (part 1)

The Duke and Harry Carney

April 19, 2011

Previously uncirculated pen and ink from sketchbook, 1995. From the 1920s to his death in 1974, Duke Ellington saw musicians come and go. Saxophonist/clarinetist Harry Carney (b. Boston, 1910) devoted 46 years to performing and recording with the maestro. The trusty sideman occasionally conducted the orchestra in Duke’s absence. After Ellington’s death, Carney was quoted as saying, “This is the worst day of my life. Without Duke I have nothing to live for.” Four months…

Continue Reading... The Duke and Harry Carney

Charlie’s Egg

April 16, 2011

Tempera on heavy stock (actually, painted on the reverse of an oversized 1943 Columbia Records convention program; clean paper was rationed and scarce during World War II). The previously uncirculated and largely unseen work was first published in our third anthology, The Sweetly Diabolic Art of Jim Flora. We issued a limited edition fine art print of the work in 2009. The identity of Charlie remains unknown.

Continue Reading... Charlie’s Egg

Artmuse.com recently issued two new—and low-cost—Jim Flora limited edition fine art prints. The above, based on a 1964 untitled and previously uncirculated work discovered in the Flora collection, has been casually tagged Brain Map to differentiate it from countless other works left unnamed by the artist. The work was first published in our 2007 Fantagraphics anthology, The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora. The print can be purchased in several different sizes at various price…

Continue Reading... Brain Map and Abstract Tangle (new fine art prints)

Hand-drawn two-page spread of figure studies for Flora’s third book for young readers, Charlie Yup and His Snip-Snap Boys (1959). The pages, which do not appear in the published edition, were scanned from the Dr. Irvin C. Kerlan children’s literature collection at the U of Minnesota. On the mock title page at right, the author refers to the book as “An Old Fashioned Scissor and Paper Adventure.” Although the characters above were drawn in pencil…

Continue Reading... Charlie Yup’s cast of characters

JimFlora.com has released a new fine art print. The panoramic Bell Island at Night was adapted from a 1968 tempera in which Flora provided a surreal nocturnal impression of his neighbors and neighborhood. Bell Island is part of Rowayton CT, and the Flora family lived on the island at 7 St. James from the late 1940s to Flora’s death in 1998. The archival-quality fine art print has been released in an edition of 30 at…

Continue Reading... Bell Island at Night (new print)

Detail from panoramic illustration for article “Arts and the Man,” Park East magazine, May 1953. Flora served as the publication’s art director in 1952, but moved on to full-time freelancing in January 1953. His successor in the Park East AD chair was his longtime colleague Robert M. Jones, who had also succeeded Flora as AD at Columbia Records in 1945. Jones jobbed out several Park East illustration assignments to Flora. The following year, Jones was…

Continue Reading... Arts and the Man (part 1)

Spot illustration for “The Patented Gate and the Mean Hamburger,” a short story by Robert Penn Warren which appeared in the January 1947 issue of Mademoiselle magazine. At the time Flora was employed at Columbia Records, but having been promoted out of the art department and focusing largely on bureaucratic tasks (much to his displeasure), he was seeking outside freelance work. His first assignment for Mademoiselle, for Robert Lowry’s “Little Baseball World,” had appeared in…

Continue Reading... The Patented Gate & the Mean Hamburger

Partial illustration, “What is Automation,” Collier’s magazine, March 16, 1956. Pull quote from the layout: Automation has been heralded by some as the threshold to a new Utopia, in which robots do all the work while human drones recline in pneumatic bliss. The complete two-tiered illustration—half-utopian (above), half-apocalyptic—was reproduced in our second anthology, The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora.

Continue Reading... What Is Automation? (part 1)

music amid the ruins

March 27, 2011

Spot illustration, April 1946 Columbia Records Disc Digest, a monthly “commentary on the new Columbia Masterworks and popular records plus interesting features on the artists who make them.” DD was the successor to Flora’s popular monthly Coda, which he created for the label in 1943. Coda was seemingly “retired” when Flora was promoted from Art Director to Advertising Manager in 1945. He illustrated all issues of Coda, but very few DDs. Here’s Flora’s cover for…

Continue Reading... music amid the ruins
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