Local Government or the Commuter is unsigned, but has the added element of a homo sapien entree (moments before the dessert menu). Absent a context, the title appears to make no sense. Oddly, the alligator, who appears more satisfied than his above cousin, has one mismatched foot. His satisfaction no doubt derives from his happy meal.
Showing posts with label checkerboard coloring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label checkerboard coloring. Show all posts
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Well-Fed at Last
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.
Labels:
1960s,
animals,
checkerboard coloring,
food + drink,
paintings,
violence
Sunday, October 9, 2011
electromechanical design
Spot illustration, promotional brochure for trade journal Electromechanical Design: Components and Systems, 1957. Flora illustrated a number of covers for the monthly from 1957 to 1960.
Saturday, April 16, 2011
Charlie's Egg

The identity of Charlie remains unknown.
Labels:
1940s,
checkerboard coloring,
Columbia Records,
monsters,
paintings
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Brain Map and Abstract Tangle (new fine art prints)
Artmuse.com recently issued two new—and low-cost—Jim Flora limited edition fine art prints. The above, based on a 1964 untitled and previously uncirculated work discovered in the Flora collection, has been casually tagged Brain Map to differentiate it from countless other works left unnamed by the artist. The work was first published in our 2007 Fantagraphics anthology, The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora.
The print can be purchased in several different sizes at various price tiers, from $25 (14" x13", edition of 200) to $1,000 (40"x38", edition of 20). These works were licensed exclusively to Artmuse.com, and are only available thru their website.
Brain Map is partnered in the Artmuse.com catalog with a second untitled 1960s Flora work, provisionally christened Abstract Tangle #2:
This work has never been published and is previously uncirculated, having been discovered—page intact—in an artist's sketchpad from the mid-1960s.
The print can be purchased in several different sizes at various price tiers, from $25 (14" x13", edition of 200) to $1,000 (40"x38", edition of 20). These works were licensed exclusively to Artmuse.com, and are only available thru their website.
Brain Map is partnered in the Artmuse.com catalog with a second untitled 1960s Flora work, provisionally christened Abstract Tangle #2:
This work has never been published and is previously uncirculated, having been discovered—page intact—in an artist's sketchpad from the mid-1960s.
Labels:
1960s,
art prints,
checkerboard coloring,
monsters,
paintings
Thursday, November 25, 2010
red and black ship

Labels:
1960s,
architecture,
checkerboard coloring,
cutaways,
maritime,
paintings,
ships
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Monday, August 16, 2010
brain map

Saturday, June 5, 2010
Jolly birthday

When he was eight, he made his first broadcast appearance, billed as "The Boy Wonder Accordionist" on CBS Radio's Hobby Lobby. The show's emcee messed up his name, announcing him as "Pete Jolly," but the boy liked the sound of it and used it ever after.Though his name is little recognized today, Jolly had a long, distinguished recording, composing and performing career. To Floraphiles, however, he is a household name, having been idiosyncratically rendered by the artist twice (in duo and trio releases) on 1955 RCA Victor 7" EP covers. In each case, Flora's caricature in no way resembled a recognizable human being. But then, Flora always insisted he "couldn't do likenesses." Original copies of both covers are extremely rare and highly sought by Flora collectors.
We issued a screen print of the Pete Jolly Duo cover in 2007.
I spoke to Jolly briefly before he passed away in 2004. I was soliciting quotes for our first volume of Floriana, The Mischievous Art of Jim Flora, the anthology that contained most of the artist's album cover illustrations. Having tracked down Jolly thru the L.A. musician's union, I gave him a call. He had no recollection of either EP cover and claimed never to have heard the name Jim Flora. Though Jolly was a gentleman to chat with, I came away from the conversation without a quote.
Labels:
1950s,
art prints,
checkerboard coloring,
instruments,
music,
RCA Victor,
record covers,
typography
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Benny Goodman @ 101

As he matured, he performed and recorded classical repertoire; the above figures illustrated Coda's preview of Goodman's recording (with the American Art Quartet) of Mozart's Quintet for Clarinet and Strings.
Flora was a fan of Goodman, and rendered him many times for Columbia and RCA Victor releases and promotional material. Asked about his encounters with the jazz musicians he illustrated, Flora told me (in 1998):
I didn't get to know many of them intimately. Benny Goodman I knew better than any of them. I did some photographic sessions with Benny. He was always difficult to get along with, but I never had any problems.Goodman was born this day in 1909.
Labels:
1950s,
Benny Goodman,
checkerboard coloring,
Coda,
commercial illustrations,
instruments,
jazz,
music
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Woody Herman

Herman was born today 97 years ago (less than a year before Flora).
Labels:
1940s,
checkerboard coloring,
Columbia Records,
Disc Digest,
instruments,
music
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
science geek 4

Labels:
1960s,
checkerboard coloring,
paintings,
science
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Le Sacre du Printemps

Many of the interior illos of this Coda issue were reproduced in our third anthology, The Sweetly Diabolic Art of Jim Flora.
Labels:
1940s,
animals,
checkerboard coloring,
Coda,
Columbia Records,
music,
violence
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Charlie and Wallingford

Photo: Don Brockway, May 2006
Labels:
1940s,
archiving,
checkerboard coloring,
children's books,
paintings,
photos
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Bix @ 5 score + 7

Labels:
1950s,
Bix,
checkerboard coloring,
Coda,
Columbia Records,
instruments,
jazz,
music
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Thursday, February 18, 2010
The Perils of Overexuberance

Labels:
1990s,
bonus limbs,
cars,
checkerboard coloring,
flowers,
monsters,
paintings
Monday, February 15, 2010
Where Will It All End?

Flora was 79 at the time. Many of his 1990s works betray a wobbly hand. Bold ideas continued to flow from the artist's hallucinatory imagination, but the brushwork was less meticulous than in previous decades.
Sunday, February 7, 2010
Skittish Horse

Labels:
1960s,
animals,
checkerboard coloring,
monsters,
paintings
Saturday, November 7, 2009
Meow! Introducing the Mambo Mini

Labels:
1950s,
art prints,
cats,
checkerboard coloring,
Mambo For Cats,
RCA Victor,
record covers,
typography
Friday, October 9, 2009
Bessie Smith and someone like Bessie Smith
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 appears to be an unfinished draft of the same scene:
It appears that Bessie gained quite a bit of weight between conception and refinement. Then again, Flora might not have had Smith in mind for the pencil and tempera draft. He often changed titles of near-identical works; many sketches were untitled, or assigned working titles which were altered for subsequent variations. A 1940s pencil sketch tagged "Boss Crump" evolved into a painting titled Self-Portrait. We'll never know at what point the artist decided that his resemblance to the legendary Tenneesse pol E. H. Crump was undeniable. A 1942 illustration for Columbia Records depicted conductor Fritz Reiner with four arms, three eyes, two noses and dueling mouths. The exact same figure was revisited in 1998—the similarity is unmistakable—but retitled Daniel Berenboim, another legendary conductor.


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