Filed Under: "dogs"

Pamela Paul in the New York Times reviews Enchanted Lion Books‘ new reprint of Flora’s Kangaroo for Christmas: Kangaroo for Christmas offered joy of an entirely different sort to the Sallys and Bobbys of the Mad Men era. First published in 1962, the story of little Kathryn’s astonishing gift from her Uncle Dingo showcases the marvelous period illustration of James Flora, a giant among midcentury commercial artists. Working in riotous bursts of carnation pink and…

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the business of baseball

December 28, 2010

Hot Stove League entry: illustration (one of several) from “The Big Leagues Are Killing Baseball,” LOOK magazine, April 15, 1958. The above image is an original painting. Many of Flora’s early commercial illustrations exist only as printed reproductions, the original art either kept by the magazines or thrown out. When I interviewed Flora in 1998, I asked him about the whereabouts of his commercial originals. “They would reproduce it,” I queried, “but they wouldn’t think…

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the alien arrives

November 17, 2010

Untitled pencil sketch, mid-1960s, discovered in artist’s sketchbook. No indication the draft was refined for any specific use.

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domestic disturbance

October 17, 2010

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.

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life in the food chain

October 14, 2010

Half-page from unfinished and untitled hand-painted children’s book prototype, ca. early 1960s. The project includes ten words (e.g., “automation,” “characteristic,” “evident,” “powerful”) defined, pronounced and illustrated for young readers. A previous partial page (“fantasy”) appeared on this blog in November 2008.

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tail wagger

October 12, 2010

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.

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Untitled, incomplete tempera and pencil drawing, ca. 1950, found in a sketchbook from Flora’s Mexican period (1950-51). The ghostly shadows in the periphery reflect bleedthrough from an image on the reverse side of the page. No finished or refined version of this work has been found.

Continue Reading... sittin’ (& hangin’ & swingin’) in a tree

Flora Mambo font

September 17, 2010

New from P22 Type Foundry: Based on playful hand-lettering from the 1955 Jim Flora Mambo For Cats RCA Victor album cover, the set includes “Flornaments,” consisting of 72 miniature figure icons (dingbats) from Flora artworks. Samples:

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last Chance

August 22, 2010

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…

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New York in the 1950s

June 18, 2010

One-half of an undated black and white business card (mock-up) from the 1950s. At the time, though he lived in Rowayton CT, Flora shared an office (and probably an art studio) at 21 East 63rd Street in Manhattan. A classic tempera painting from the period caricatures the neighborhood. No copies of the printed version of this card exist in the Flora collection. The discoloration in the upper right is an aging artifact.

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Primer for Prophets 3rd series

November 15, 2009

NOW AVAILABLE: the next four works in the Primer for Prophets screen print series. Cool Flora illustrations of the American nuclear family during the 1950s, when grocers employed stockdogs, crows fought tug-of-war over lingerie, and cigarettes were obligatory in the obstetrics ward. The images derive from a 1954 trade-only alphabet booklet that Flora illustrated for CBS-TV, depicting consumer markets for prospective TV advertisers. The third set of prints features ECONOMIZED, NURSED, UNDERESTIMATED, and WASHED. Each…

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cow chaos

August 28, 2009

Tempera overlay, The Day the Cow Sneezed, 1957, courtesy the Dr. Irvin Kerlan Collection, University of Minnesota Children’s Literature Research Center.

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