Filed Under: "violence"

The Panic Is On

December 26, 2014

The Panic is On, pen & ink, 1990s, unpublished(No relation to the Nick Travis 1955 LP cover)

Continue Reading... The Panic Is On

Tenement K

October 22, 2013

Today we introduce a new limited edition fine art print called TENEMENT K, whose residents are bawdy, musical, criminal, and/or exhibitionistic. Doesn’t matter if you’re rowdy, serpentine, or headless—the landlord will rent you a room. If you were a mutant miscreant, you’d be home by now. The previously unpublished and uncirculated work, which dates from the 1940s, is owned by a private collector who allowed us to have the work professionally photographed for print reproduction….

Continue Reading... Tenement K

traffic snarls

March 5, 2012

Miserable pedestrian—what part of “beep” don’t you understand? Untitled, unfinished tempera on board (detail), 1950s. Purpose unknown.

Continue Reading... traffic snarls

Well-Fed at Last

October 15, 2011

These two tempera with pencil illustrations, differently titled yet seemingly related, were discovered in a mid-1960s Flora sketchpad pages apart. Both have a completed look, yet no discernible (or documented) purpose. Well-Fed At Last is signed, which indicates the artist considered the work finished and fit to behold. The alligator has a vicious or peeved demeanor. He has no love.   Local Government or the Commuter is unsigned, but has the added element of a…

Continue Reading... Well-Fed at Last

rush hour

September 30, 2011

Commercial spot illustration, 1961, magazine and subject unknown. Pen & ink, watercolor and Liquid Paper on artist board with printer’s markings. Time-traveler Buster Keaton found himself in a similar predicament in the legendary Twilight Zone episode “Once Upon a Time,” which aired the same year.

Continue Reading... rush hour

road rage (1958)

September 26, 2011

The miserable family road trip. Commercial spot illustration, 1958, magazine and subject unknown. Pen & ink and watercolor on artist board. Three additional thematically unrelated spot illos were arrayed on the board.

Continue Reading... road rage (1958)

costing you an arm & a leg

January 13, 2011

Another pencil draft from the 1955 sketchbook we’ve been featuring the past few weeks. The purpose of this stand-alone drawing is unknown. Other sketches on the same and adjacent pages feature rough panels for a cartoon ad about Proctor toasters; none of those drawings depict a loss of limbs.

Continue Reading... costing you an arm & a leg

pecking order

January 5, 2011

Our title, not Flora’s. Draft from sketchbook ca. 1955, purpose unknown. Adjacent pages feature rough illustrations of management skills, probably intended for a topical magazine assignment.

Continue Reading... pecking order

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…

Continue Reading... the business of baseball

This will be our next limited edition fine art print. Little Rock Getaway is an undated Flora tempera that reflects his mid- to late-1960s color schemes and contours. It will be released soon in an edition of 25. Floraphiles can pre-order via the linked title.

Continue Reading... Little Rock Getaway (pre-launch)

Detail from title page, Charlie Yup and His Snip-Snap Boys, Flora’s third children’s book, 1959. That’s Charlie, snipping away at right; the villain with the lasso is Red Mike. In the book, Red Mike is … red. However, as with many illustrated books of the period, color pages alternated with black and white to make printing more economical. A number of Flora’s kiddie books reflect this trend.

Continue Reading... Red Mike hunts the scissor boy

Le Sacre du Printemps

April 28, 2010

Flora created the Columbia Records new release monthly Coda in early 1943 and illustrated most issues thru 1945 (after which the journal morphed into Disc Digest). The March 1944 issue is one of Flora’s most satisfying on an artistic level. The cover (above) illustrates a Columbia Masterworks four-disc album (price: $4.50) of Igor Stravinsky conducting his own Le Sacre du Printemps (The Rite of Spring), described in Coda as “a ballet based on the paganistic…

Continue Reading... Le Sacre du Printemps
  • 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