Filed Under: "details"

Detail of untitled 1940s tempera casually referred to as “Tenement K,” which contains quite a few enigmatic and disturbing tenants. The original work is owned by Keith McAllister, who extracted the above celebratory duo to produce a holiday card titled “Party Animals.” No better way to ring in seasonal festivities than a curiously sinister Flora tableau.
Continue Reading... Party Animals ►
Detail, “Furnished,” Primer for Prophets alphabet series, 1954. We’ve issued 12 letters as limited edition screen prints, but “F(urnished)” is still in the deep freeze. The full print isn’t as disturbing as the above detail suggests—the husband beyond the crop hasn’t lost his cool. All shall be revealed by the time we complete the series.
Continue Reading... domestic disturbance ►
Detail, “Raided,” Primer for Prophets alphabet series, 1954. We’ve issued 12 letters as limited edition screen prints, but “R” remains on our to-do list.
Continue Reading... tail wagger ►
Spot illustration, dedication page, The Day the Cow Sneezed, now back in print thanks to Enchanted Lion Books. The first review—favorable!—courtesy the For Immediate Release (Kids) blog: I like his habit of calling attention to certain words by putting them in all caps, nearly on every page: POW! WHAMBO! and my personal favorite KA-BLOWIE-BLAM! I also enjoy the language he uses, specific phrases such as “scrunched as flat as corn flakes.” It’s just plain good…
Continue Reading... balancing act ►
Detail, The Big Bank Robbery, mid-1960s tempera on board. The bank displaying the signage at right isn’t actually depicted in the complete work, only a counter clerk with upraised arms holdup-style (not pictured in detail). We issued a limited edition fine art print of the work in 2009, and one-half of the print run has been sold. Prices increase as editions sell down.
Continue Reading... First National Bank Robbery ►
Chance Encounter (detail above), a 1970 Flora tempera, was issued in a limited edition run of 20 in 2008. With last week’s sale of print number 1/20, the edition is now sold out. It may later be offered in reduced form in print items such as cards, calendars or folios, or commissioned as exclusive, premium-priced, custom-formatted single prints produced privately at our discretion. But that’s it for edition prints. Chance Encounter is our first sold…
Continue Reading... last Chance ►
Rowayton Remembered, detail of woodcut print, ca. 1974 My Brush With Historya series by the readers of American Heritage magazineJames Flora’s contributionFebruary/March 1997 (Volume 48, Issue 1) During the late 1940s I lived in Rowayton, a small Connecticut village, with my wife and two small children. I was the art director of Columbia Records, a job I dearly loved. In my work I had many opportunities to meet the musical celebrities of the day, Frank…
Continue Reading... “Mr. Flora, this is Aleksandr Kerensky” ►
Partial scan (about one-third, with color checker card) of unpublished 1954 woodcut print Sheffield Island. The original block is in the Flora family collection. Only a handful of original artist prints exist. We are contemplating issuing a new limited edition run of the complete work next year.
Continue Reading... Sheffield Island (partial scan) ►
Detail, cover illustration, “Human Engineering: Tailoring the Machine to the Man,” Research and Engineering magazine, February 1956. We reproduced the entire illustration here. Pure blacks are missing from the detail, an enlargement of a scan of a worn cover. Copies of R&E in any condition are difficult to find, and the original art has not been located.
Continue Reading... science geek 5 ►
Detail from title page, Charlie Yup and His Snip-Snap Boys, Flora’s third children’s book, 1959. That’s Charlie, snipping away at right; the villain with the lasso is Red Mike. In the book, Red Mike is … red. However, as with many illustrated books of the period, color pages alternated with black and white to make printing more economical. A number of Flora’s kiddie books reflect this trend.
Continue Reading... Red Mike hunts the scissor boy ►
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.
Continue Reading... food chain 2 ►
Detail, The Many Aspects of Love, tempera on board, mid-1990s (and pre-dated by a pen & ink drawing). Not a top-tier work, the above partial reflects the extended mayhem. While there’s plenty of vestigial Flora mischief (note demons in the head at left), works like The Many Aspects veer perilously close to self-parody. The complete work has not been published.
Continue Reading... Love (and some of its aspects) ►