Filed Under: "holidays"

Flora, Raymond and Takashi

December 25, 2012

We received a photo of this festive tableau from our good friend (and devoted Floraphile) in Japan, Takashi Okada. The greeting card, a vintage artifact ca. 1944, was purchased by Takashi from the Flora collection a few years ago. Behind the card sits a demo of Takashi’s forthcoming Raymond Scott Songbook, a 2-cd collection of rare Scott archival recordings and new cover versions by a variety of artists. Positioned to the right is a figurine…

Continue Reading... Flora, Raymond and Takashi

summer fun

July 6, 2012

Illustration detail, “What is Automation,” Collier’s magazine, March 16, 1956. The optimistic take: “Automation has been heralded by some as the threshold to a new Utopia, in which robots do all the work while human drones recline in pneumatic bliss.” There was a counterbalancing pessimistic view, but in observance of the current summer heat wave, we’ll stick with the sunshinier forecast.  We’re still looking forward to consumer helicopters with open-air cockpits.

Continue Reading... summer fun

The Fourth of July

July 4, 2012

The work isn’t titled, and there’s no specific reference to Independence Day, but this unpublished 1990s acrylic on canvas suggests celebratory patriotism and civic pride, so we’ll offer it as tribute to our nation’s founding 236 years ago today. P.S. This non sequitur works too. Illustration from The Fabulous Firework Family, Flora’s first (1955) children’s book.

Continue Reading... The Fourth of July

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)

Christmas, 1942

December 25, 2010

Christmas greetings Flora-style from Columbia/Okeh Records. Above: cover of the December 1942 new release flyer from Flora’s then-employer. James had not yet risen to the position of art director (he would in 1943); at the time he was just nearing the end of his first year in the art department under the legendary Alex Steinweiss.

Continue Reading... Christmas, 1942

Happy 4th

July 4, 2009

Draft illustration, The Fabulous Firework Family, 1955(published that year by Harcourt, Brace) note: reposted from 2007

Continue Reading... Happy 4th

Valentine’s Day hint hint

February 4, 2009

Say it with Flora’s: KISSED — screen print from the Primer for Prophets alphabet series: an iconic 1954 illustration by Flora commemorating romantic commitment through the exchange of luxurious merchandise. Order before Feb. 10 and we’ll (almost) guarantee delivery by the 14th. Meaning, it’ll be shipped in time and — barring climate interference or courier screw-up — will arrive in time for thrilling your significant something-or-other. Order here.

Continue Reading... Valentine’s Day hint hint

revelry

December 31, 2008

Every December 31 these guys paint their noses to match their chins and get royally toasted. Must be something to celebrate. But careful—apparently it can turn your teeth grey, or cause you to lose them altogether! Have a HAPPEE!

Continue Reading... revelry

Merry Flora Christmas 2008

December 25, 2008

hand-printed card, early 1940s

Continue Reading... Merry Flora Christmas 2008

Get toasted for 2008

January 1, 2008

Detail, untitled holiday painting, ca. 1951. These stemware sophisticates also appear on a t-shirt Sketch, ca. 1951, featuring a draft of the celebratory duo

Continue Reading... Get toasted for 2008

Merry Flora Christmas 2007

December 25, 2007

montage by IC using early 1950s Flora details Merry Christmas, Happy Chanukah, Merry Saturnalia, Happy Festivus—whatever.

Continue Reading... Merry Flora Christmas 2007

We’ve posted several complete Flora works below. However, one mission of this blog is to post details of Flora’s complex artistic madscapes. There are several reasons, not the least being our desire to spark surprise when we publish complete works in future books. Details serve as teasers. However, in a Flora mise-en-scène the details are “complete” works unto themselves. Isolating figures provides an opportunity for closer scrutiny. A typical image-dense Flora montage so overwhelms the…

Continue Reading... The deviltry is in the details
  • Jim Flora
  • The Mischievous and Diabolic art of James Flora (1914-1998). Glimpses of rare works from the archives and news about Flora-related projects.

  • Categories

  • Archives