Monday, August 06, 2007

Vintage Photo Archive

Organ Grinder 1930s San Francisco
Afro American contortionist guitarist Pennsylvania 1921
These images are from the Vintage Photo Archive .
They have lots of great old images that you can order prints of
(Thomas Robinson, Portland, OR).

Friday, August 03, 2007

In the Swim

Charles Robinson, Illustrator
Kogyo Terazaki
Kokunimasa Utagaw
I love these! I have been looking for images of bathers in old-fashioned bathing costumes. Be sure to click on images to enlarge.
I got these from Japonisme via Internet Weekly. Thanks!

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Butterfly Hunter


Nabokov

Every summer Vladimir Nabokov and his wife would go butterfly hunting. He deposited the specimens he found at scientific institutions such as Harvard or Cornell Universities. It was during these expeditions that "Lolita" was finally finished in 1954, 14 years after Nabokov had first thought of the idea. He wrote the novel in the evenings or on cloudy days while travelling through America: western places such as Telluride, CO; Afton, Wyoming; Portal, Arizona; and Ashland, OR. He was not a party person. He liked to hang out with his wife, play chess and hunt butterflies. The rest of the time was spent mostly writing in solitude, for that is what all great writers do.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Lo and Behold: Amy Crehore's "Literartistry" Paintings


Click to enlarge details- Amy Crehore "Story of Lolita" paintings
"The Story of Lolita, Part One" copyright 2007 Amy Crehore

"The Story of Lolita, Part Two" copyright 2007 Amy Crehore

Click on Images to Enlarge

In the book "Lolita" by Vladimir Nabokov, Humbert Humbert is a demon-man full of lust for little Lo, his twelve year old American step-daughter. Humbert was psychologically stunted at age 13 because his first love, Annable Leigh, had died of typhus at only 12. "Lolita" is a prison "memoir" written by an intellectual adult man (Humbert) who is also a murderer and child molestor. ' In recounting his relations with Lolita, Humbert gradually moves from feeling only blind lust for the twelve-year-old "nymphet" girl, to genuine and everlasting love for a worn-out, old-before-her-time adult woman. The reader abhors Humbert's lust, and using of Lolita, but can empathize with his constant guilt over his physiological addiction.' (link) The novel is brilliantly well-written with continuous streams of complex and clever literary allusions. The poetic novel, "Lolita", has inspired my two new paintings (above) for the upcoming group show, "Literartistry".

The "Literartistry" show opens at Corey Helford Gallery in Culver City, CA on August 11, 2007 from 7-10 pm and continues for 3 weeks. About 50 artists will participate, each interpreting his/her favorite book, and the books themselves will be available for check-out in an upstairs library. Please contact gallery for purchases and check their website for online viewing.

To see my paintings without frames go to:

The Art of Amy Crehore

Monday, July 30, 2007

George Barbier

Detail of Fan 1912 by G. Barbier




1912 Fan by G. Barbier
George Barbier (1882-1932) is considered one of the finest illustrators in the Art Deco genre.
He had the same sense of elegance as the finest Japanese printmakers.
George Barbier

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Wanda Gag


Wanda Hazel Gág was born on March 11, 1893 in New Ulm, Minnesota. I wish I had known Wanda Gag. She wrote and illustrated "Millions of Cats" in 1928. It's one of my favorite children's books. Here is a photo of the French version. "Millions of Cats" was named a Newbery Honor Book the year it came out. Gág is credited with being the first artist to utilize the double-page spread and to revive hand lettered text. Her pen and ink drawings have this incredible sense of rhythm. They flow up and down and all around...from page to page. Wanda also exhibited her fine art in NYC galleries and she was a friend of Georgia O'Keefe. I never knew that. It seems she was a very clever artist indeed. She is even sporting a Louise Brooks hairdo in this attractive photo.
You can read more and see a list of books by