Filed Under: "Little Man Press"
Untitled, undated, unsigned woodcut print from Flora’s Little Man Press days (1939-1942). The original block cannot be located, and we have no idea of the image’s original context. It does not appear in any LMP publications.
Continue Reading... puzzle pony ►
Another rare (and previously unseen) print acquired from a recent estate sale in Cincinnati. As with all prints from Flora’s productive post-Art Academy period, the original block cannot be located (possibly having been destroyed or discarded by Flora’s LMP partner Robert Lowry). The above water-damaged print is unsigned, untitled, and unnumbered. No documentation exists regarding the work’s purpose (e.g., publicity, ad, edition print, chapbook page). The faded vertical center section (and lack of signature) implies…
Continue Reading... Little Man Press, Summer 1939 ►
Woodcut print, ca. 1938-1940, rendered when Flora lived in Cincinnati and was working with Robert Lowry producing Little Man Press publications. Title, edition run, and location of original block unknown. The print was discovered in the estate of a Cincinnati collector who passed away at age 93 several months ago. The collection included about a dozen vintage Flora prints, most previously unseen by us. We’ll publish others soon.
Continue Reading... sitting man ►
Above: rejected attempt at a Little Man Press logo, ca. 1939-1940, discovered in early sketchbook. The experiments continued: Eventually Flora and his LMP partner Robert Lowry settled on this design:
Continue Reading... Little Man Press logo (evolution) ►
Some people dedicate their bodies to science. Shannon Wade, of Portland OR, dedicates hers to the art of Jim Flora. Not the first time, either. The above distended figure originally appeared on the title page of GUP, a 1942 Little Man Press publication written by Robert Lowry and illustrated by Flora.
Continue Reading... Fresh ink and Flora tattoo #2 ►
Flora woodcut print reproduced in Murderpie, a chapbook written by Robert Lowry, published by their struggling Little Man Press, Cincinnati, 1939. Many Little Man publications featured bizarre, meticulous cuts by Flora, but none of the original blocks are known to exist. This is one of the few extant signed LMP-era prints. From Lowry’s text: I WILL HAVE TO BAM THEM NOW, he said. He began to push them down with his two hands. He pushed…
Continue Reading... Murderpie ►Flora rendered the above woodcut for the cover of a collection of short stories by Alvin Frederick Levin, published by Little Man Press in 1940. New Directions Books has just issued Love Is Like Park Avenue, Levin’s “unfinished novel,” which includes the “Little Alvin” vignettes and a reproduction of Flora’s woodcut. You’ve probably never heard of Alvin Levin. Neither had we. The intriguing rediscovery of Levin is chronicled by New Directions Senior Editor Declan Spring…
Continue Reading... Love Is Like Park Avenue ►
Pencil sketch, ca. 1940-42. A refined wood- or linocut of this critter appeared in the 1942 Little Man Press chapbook GUP, one of many Flora spot illustrations adorning the Robert Lowry story “The Hotel.”
Continue Reading... spotted kitteh ►
Robert Lowry (1919-1994) would turn 90 today. Don’t expect a presidential proclamation in commemoration of this troubled man’s legacy. However, we salute the Little Man Press writer/editor for changing the course of Flora’s career, and probably for influencing his art. It all began one day in 1938 when the volatile literary turbine accosted Flora on the Art Academy of Cincinnati campus and demanded the undergrad illustrator serve as art director for his fledgling independent press…
Continue Reading... Robert Lowry @ 90 ►
Rasputin-strength, dismembered and trepanated zombie. Spot illo (woodcut, one of many), Murderpie, Little Man Press, 1939. Publication written by Robert Lowry. Whereabouts of original woodcuts unknown.
Continue Reading... It lives, it walks, it seeks revenge! ►
Woodcut print accompanying Robert Lowry‘s short story, “March Morning,” page 36, Hutton Street (Little Man Press, 1940). This 7-1/2″ x 5″ chapbook contains 18 meticulous woodengravings by Flora. Whereabouts of the original blocks is (ahem!) unknown.
Continue Reading... March Morning ►
Flora woodengraving for short story “The 6.98 Jacket” by Robert Lowry, appearing in Hutton Street, published by Little Man Press, Cincinnati, 1940. Print run unknown, but all LMP chapbooks were extremely limited editions between 125 and 400. The booklet contains 18 meticulous woodcuts by Flora, none of which are known to have survived. If they were left in the custody of Lowry, he likely sold them or used them for kindling. The man was volatile….
Continue Reading... The 6.98 Jacket ►
