Filed Under: "sketches"

unfinished dancers

May 21, 2010

Unfinished pencil and tempera sketch, ca. 1950-51 (Flora’s Mexican sojourn), found in artist’s notebook. There’s no evidence the work was refined or adapted for any other purpose. The ghost image in the background is the bleedthrough of a series of figures on the reverse. The left figure above has some female attributes, the right some vague echoes of manhood. Regarding the lady, we won’t speculate on what’s protruding from her butt or clustered in her…

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ship and helmsman

February 27, 2010

Untitled, undated, unfinished ship and helmsman sketches; tempera and pencil in sketchbook. These drafts, which probably date from the early to mid-1950s, are juxtaposed on the page as shown.

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Bijou (sketch)

February 10, 2010

Pencil sketch from the mid-1990s of a cryptic tableau later rendered as a tempera on paper entitled Bijou. The painting retained most elements and positioning, with minor changes. The cloud was omitted, the plane enlarged, and the vertical theater marquee which reads “Adelaid” was renamed “Bijou.” The painting is unpublished and uncirculated, and will be reproduced in a future anthology.

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Here are two tempera illustrations discovered in an early- to mid-1960s sketchpad in the Flora collection. The more refined of the two works has a title: Bessie Smith, presumably a vignette of the soulful, bawdy 1920s and ’30s Empress of the Blues. The pianist (great hat!) is unidentified, and we can’t vouch for the historical accuracy of Smith performing with her nipples exposed: The second work, pages away in the same sketchpad, is untitled but…

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cordial claws

September 16, 2009

Anthropomorphic lobsters from sketchbook, pencil and crayon, early 1960s. Intended project unknown.

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unfinished tableaus

August 31, 2009

Unfinished figures in tempera and pencil, photographed on sketchbook page. The undated work is probably from around 1960 because the contours resemble Big Evening, a tempera from that year.

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piano variations

August 20, 2009

A draft and a refinement of a common theme. This barrelhouse piano player was roughly rendered for a series of demo booklets the Cincinnati-based Flora crafted in 1941 as a job pitch: “Columbia Records was reissuing old jazz records without much fanfare,” the artist (and jazz aficionado) later wrote. “I had the temerity to make these small booklets to try to point out the error of their ways.” His temerity paid off. In early 1942…

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Ding Dong Daddy

August 11, 2009

Pen & ink sketch, early 1940s. The title likely derives from the song “I’m a Ding Dong Daddy from Dumas,” penned by Phil Baxter in the late 1920s. Dumas is a town in the northwest Texas Panhandle. The song was recorded by many country and jazz artists, including Louis Armstrong (in 1930), and was later a hit for singer-bandleader Phil Harris. Flora’s take is typically idiosyncratic and perhaps references the titular “ding dong” in the…

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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.

The Rover Boys

April 12, 2009

The Rover Boys, tempera on board, ca. 1943. The work was presented as a wedding gift to Clara Gee Kastner and Stanley Stamaty, Flora’s classmates and friends from the Art Academy of Cincinnati. (Clara and Stan are the parents of cartoonist Mark Alan Stamaty.) No idea if the triple-headed figure was intended to portray the Rover lads of literary fame. The work was reproduced in The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora A pen and…

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spotted kitteh

April 9, 2009

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.”

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Pencil sketch, early 1940s. Pulled-apart facial features linked by pin-lines is a common motif in early 1940s Flora sketches and paintings. Previous examples here, here, here, here, here, here, and here.

Continue Reading... another from the skull gallery
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