Filed Under: "Fantagraphics Books"

Our fourth Jim Flora anthology is officially available today. Our first book, The Mischievous Art of Jim Flora (2004), featured Flora’s known album covers. Since that book’s publication, more vintage covers have been found, as well as the artist’s rough drafts and rejected illustrations. The Mischievous Art went through two editions, but is now out of print, highly sought and available only at high prices through rare-book sellers. So we decided to compile a complete collection of Flora record…

Continue Reading... The High Fidelity Art of Jim Flora

Gary Groth (left) and Kim Thompson On Wednesday we noted the death at age 56 of Kim Thompson, co-publisher (with Gary Groth) of Fantagraphics Books, under whose imprint we’ve graced the world with three Flora anthologies. (A fourth, The High Fidelity Art of Jim Flora, arrives in September.) Kim served as the company’s editor and point person for my (and Barb Economon‘s) Flora books. He conferred with us and designer Laura Lindgren during development and production, ensured…

Continue Reading... Kim Thompson – An Appreciation

Kim Thompson, 56

June 20, 2013

Fantagraphics Books co-publisher Kim Thompson passed away this morning at age 56 after a four-month bout with lung cancer. Kim served as editor and point-person on our three Flora anthologies, and we missed working with him on our soon-to-be-published book #4. I’ll post a detailed personal perspective on Kim tomorrow—which means I’ll devote 50 times as many words explaining what a great guy he was to work with and how much we’ll miss him. Our…

Continue Reading... Kim Thompson, 56

One of our representatives will be with you shortly. Your visit is very important to us, and we look forward to answering your questions. Such as: What’s up with the Flora blog, the website, and Jim Flora art in general? The paucity of new posts in recent months does not connote inactivity in the Florasphere. Here’s breaking news—and news which has previously broken: Flora co-archivist Barbara Economon and I have completed a new book—our fourth— for Fantagraphics:…

Continue Reading... Too Much Information – Part 1

Get in line …

April 27, 2013

… a Cugat conga line, to pre-order the new Flora anthology, The High Fidelity Art of Jim Flora. It features all of Flora’s known album and EP covers (including back cover illustrations) from 1947 to 1961 for Columbia, RCA Victor, and their affiliated labels, along with music-themed fine art works, illustrations, and sketches. The book was completed last week and will head shortly to the printer. (Despite what it says at Amazon, the publication date…

Continue Reading... Get in line …

There’s been little Florablogging in recent months. Not for lack of interest, certainly not for lack of fresh material. We could post something new every day for the next five years and still retain a cache of surprises. A few years ago we discovered a sketch album that contained 225 (artist-clipped and glued-in) pencil and ink drawings from the 1940s, very few of which were subsequently published or posted. That album alone could carry us…

Continue Reading... The High Fidelity Art of Jim Flora

physical inventory risk

July 19, 2010

We learned the phrase “physical inventory risk” last week from someone in the music business. It describes why, in the current industry-wide economic downturn, many record labels won’t gamble on artistically worthy but commercially uncertain projects: because of the probability (“risk”) they’ll end up with unsold goods (“physical inventory,” e.g., CDs) sitting on distributor and retailer shelves. Rather than commit (again, “risk”) financial resources to marginal productions, they trim existing catalog and/or keep the release…

Continue Reading... physical inventory risk

5Qs 4 Eric Reynolds

October 2, 2009

Eric Reynolds has worked at Fantagraphics (our Flora books publisher) for 15 years, mostly as publicist. It’s been our pleasure to conduct business with (and, in September 2007, meet) the affable Mr. Reynolds, an admitted Floraphile. He was recently booted upstairs by his bosses to the position of Associate Publisher. A large round of applause for that company move (though we’ll miss Eric on the PR end). Comic Book Galaxy’s Trouble With Comics blog tendered…

Continue Reading... 5Qs 4 Eric Reynolds

Sweetly Diabolic: a review

September 3, 2009

Rave review for Sweetly Diabolic from Joe Bendel of J.B. Spins. “Chusid and Economon once again prove to be wise stewards of the Flora archives. Sweetly Diabolic reveals many largely unknown aspects of his work, but also fruitfully revisits his classic Columbia-era work. Thanks to the quality of the reproductions and design of the book itself, the vitality of Flora’s art comes through on each page. An effective introduction to Flora’s art and a satisfying…

Continue Reading... Sweetly Diabolic: a review

A lengthy gestation period: our new book, conceived two years ago, is today born. Fantagraphics, with godlike dominion, declared July 29 as the official publication date of The Sweetly Diabolic Art of Jim Flora, our third anthology. Purchase at: Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, or from Fantagraphics. Doesn’t matter to us. Buy it. Here’s what you’ll discover: Like its two predecessors, The Mischievous Art of Jim Flora (2004) and The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora…

Continue Reading... The Sweetly Diabolic Art of Jim Flora

Longtime friend, music collector, and fellow Floraphile David Burd reports a first sighting: The new Flora book is in stores today! I just picked up my copy. We expected the book to hit streets in mid-August. That’s what happens when you work with a niche publisher—they surprise on the upside. (Note: Amazon.com lists a release date of July 29, 2009.) Illustration of celebratory Benny Goodman (above): not in this book. It appeared in our second…

Continue Reading... Our new book. Our new book.

We never claimed our favorite artist was a religious figure. Their book costs $1,500. Ours will be more “competitively priced.” Left: one of several early 1940s Flora sketches of the Crucifixion, entitled Descent From the Cross, subsequently developed into a refined pencil drawing (published in our second book, The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora). Flora also rendered the work as a pen and ink with tempera during the 1990s. HT: Don Brockway

Continue Reading... Our new book. Not our new book.
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  • The Mischievous and Diabolic art of James Flora (1914-1998). Glimpses of rare works from the archives and news about Flora-related projects.

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