Filed Under: "1960s"

food chain 2

May 7, 2010

Detail, Sherwood Walks Home, Flora’s eighth children’s book, 1966. We won’t reveal the outcome, but we suspect the cat is the most determined diner.

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science geek 4

May 4, 2010

Untitled acrylic on board, ca. mid-1960s. This modular work echoes illustrations Flora provided for the covers of Computer Design magazine during the 1960s and ’70s. We’ve yet to determine whether this painting or an adaptation actually graced a CD cover. If not, this blog post might represent its first public exposure (we haven’t reproduced this work in any of our Flora anthologies to date).

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Skittish Horse

February 7, 2010

Tempera on paper, mid-1960s. The previously unpublished work was reproduced in our second book, The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora. It’s on our short list to issue as a fine art print.

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crimestoppers

November 29, 2009

Great detail (extracted at the Print & Pattern blog) from Flora’s mid-1960s painting The Big Bank Robbery. We issued a limited edition fine art print of the work earlier this year. The backstory on the work is unknown. It may be a generic bank hold-up, or based on a specific historic incident. No documentation from the artist is known to exist.

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spooky doings

October 31, 2009

Perhaps the kid dropped his bag of trick-or-treat candy (and shed his costume) sprinting for safety. Illustration from introductory chapter of A Red Skel(e)ton in Your Closet, a 1965 anthology of “ghost stories gay and grim” selected for young readers by popular film & TV comedian Red Skelton. The book contains 21 interior illustrations which are uncredited, but Flora’s trademarks are unmistakable. The artist was under contract to Harcourt, Brace at the time, and in…

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seaside setting

October 15, 2009

Detail (about two-thirds of the complete work) of an untitled, unpublished tempera on board, ca. mid-1960s. The collection contains a number of similarly composed maritime paintings from this period, though colors and figures vary. If you have our recent book, The Sweetly Diabolic Art of Jim Flora, compare this setting with Salt Pond—Block Island on page 54.

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Here are two tempera illustrations discovered in an early- to mid-1960s sketchpad in the Flora collection. The more refined of the two works has a title: Bessie Smith, presumably a vignette of the soulful, bawdy 1920s and ’30s Empress of the Blues. The pianist (great hat!) is unidentified, and we can’t vouch for the historical accuracy of Smith performing with her nipples exposed: The second work, pages away in the same sketchpad, is untitled but…

Continue Reading... Bessie Smith and someone like Bessie Smith

Lobster Pound (1962)

October 6, 2009

Taking a break from conjuring bonus-limbed mutants and bug-eyed boppers, Flora often sketched maritime culture in his extended backyard. The above untitled pen & ink of a seafood shack was discovered in a travel sketchbook that contained dozens of the artist’s impressions of Italy and France, several dated 1962. Back on his “home surf,” Flora filled another two dozen pages of the tablet with southern Connecticut shoreline vignettes and briny motifs.

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cordial claws

September 16, 2009

Anthropomorphic lobsters from sketchbook, pencil and crayon, early 1960s. Intended project unknown.

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unfinished tableaus

August 31, 2009

Unfinished figures in tempera and pencil, photographed on sketchbook page. The undated work is probably from around 1960 because the contours resemble Big Evening, a tempera from that year.

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the old brawl game

August 24, 2009

The title and date of this 1960s commercial tempera illustration are unknown, as is the periodical for which it was assigned (possibly LIFE or LOOK magazine). The mise-en-scène depicts historic incidents and major league baseball players associated with Busch Stadium (a.k.a. Sportsman’s Park), home of two St. Louis baseball teams: the luckless Browns (1902-53) and the perennially contending Cardinals (1920-66). The ballpark was replaced by Busch Memorial Stadium in 1966, an event which this illustration…

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Do you know your FGHIJKLs?

August 16, 2009

Get to know them — Flora-style! Individual letters culled from various works by the funky font master himself.

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