Filed Under: "architecture"
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) ►
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) ►
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 ►
We return from a fine art print hiatus with our first new work of 2011: Bell Island at Night, a 1968 tempera in which Flora provides a surreal nocturnal impression of his neighbors. Bell Island is part of Rowayton (which in turn is part of Norwalk, CT), and the Flora family lived on the island at 7 St. James from the late 1940s to Flora’s death in 1998. Our newest fine art print will be…
Continue Reading... Bell Island at Night ►
Illustration from the cover of Eugene Ormandy & the Philadelphia Orchestra’s 1954 Columbia Masterworks 10″ LP, Richard Strauss: Till Eulenspiegels [sic] Lustige Streiche and Waltzes from Der Rosenkavalier (AL-46). Flora illustrated about a dozen covers for Columbia during his 1943-1950 employment at the label (all released after he relinquished the Art Director chair in 1945). Following a 15-month Mexican hiatus, he rekindled his U.S. freelance career in 1951 and provided a number of work-for-hire illustrations…
Continue Reading... Richard Strauss LP cover (1954) ►
Figures from a mid-1950s sketchbook. The two panels were juxtaposed horizontally, but are stacked here for vertical display. The purpose of the drafts is unknown, and the elements are unrelated to any other sketches in the book.
Continue Reading... miscellaneous sketches ►
Baba Yaga, pen & ink and oil pastel on paper, 14″ x 16″, 1996. Previously unpublished and uncirculated late life work (two years before the artist’s death). Wiki entry profiles a dangerous damsel: She flies around on a giant pestle or broomstick, kidnaps (and presumably eats) small children, and lives in a hut that stands on chicken legs.
Continue Reading... Baba Yaga ►
Spot illustration, Columbia Coda, August 1945. That was Flora’s final year as Columbia art director, and the final year of the monthly Coda, which Flora launched in 1943 and illustrated single-handedly. In January 1946, Robert M. Jones assumed the AD role when Flora was promoted to Advertising Manager. Coda was transformed into the monthly Disc Digest, few of which featured Flora illustrations.
Continue Reading... music & films ►
Untitled, undated (ca. mid-1960s) ship in cross-cut view. Previously unpublished and uncirculated work (rendered in tempera and pencil) discovered in sketchpad.
Continue Reading... red and black ship ►
Untitled pen & ink, 1994, from sketchpad. Unknown Mexican (presumably) town square.
Continue Reading... outside El Centro ►
JimFlora.com is offering a new 2011 poster-sized calendar featuring a 1954 Flora woodcut illustration called SHEFFIELD ISLAND. The artwork is hand-printed letterpress in black ink on kraft card stock; a 12-month tear away calendar is attached on the bottom. When the year ends, you have a unique hand-pulled letterpress Jim Flora print suitable for framing. The full dimensions of the card with artwork are 13-1/2″ x 17″. The calendars, which were hand-printed by Yee-Haw Industrial…
Continue Reading... Sheffield Island 2011 letterpress calendar ►
