Sunday, May 05, 2019

BRIGGS DRAWS LITTLE GIRLS

[The forthcoming book about the art of Austin Briggs, from Auad Publishing, is now at the printer.  Unfortunately, there was not enough room in the book for many great images.  Rather than return them to obscurity, I've decided to show several outtakes on this blog between now and the publication date.]

I love Austin Briggs' preliminary drawing of five girls marching in a line through a bar. 

Drawing courtesy of Roger Reed at Illustration House
Note how Briggs uses  the angles of their hats to show their individual characters.  The eldest girl is prim and decorous but by the time we get to the pile up at the end, all decorum is gone:


Briggs adopted a similar approach for the little girls greeting their daddy in the following ad for Douglas Airliners.  Even with his rough, sketchy technique and their backs turned to the viewer, each of these girls has a distinctive personality:


The shy one hides behind her mother, the excitable one leaps in the air, and the middle one wobbles indecisively. 
The drawing is intended to look spontaneous but Briggs did at least a dozen preliminary sketches, trying to tie a hair ribbon on a bouncing ping pong ball. 


This large sketch (19" x 25") and others were tossed on the floor of Briggs' studio as he worked.  That's Briggs' shoe print in the upper right corner.

When Briggs captured touches he liked, he incorporated them in the final drawing.


Briggs' experience shows up in that hand

Before he turned to his charcoal illustrations, Briggs made his reputation doing fully painted illustrations.  Here he paints frisky children in an ad for dog food


He employed a lively brush technique to keep his painting active:



Still, at some point in his career he seems to have realized that the medium of paint unavoidably civilized his pictures.  If he wanted to convey the indecorum of little girls, a crayon or vine charcoal was a more suitable medium.


Despite the seeming crudeness of this line, note how sensitively Briggs depicts the curiosity and lack of coordination in those young fingers.

In an era of slick, full color illustration Briggs was a pioneer in making these basic drawing tools fashionable again.


Monday, April 29, 2019

A NOVEL WAY TO EXPERIENCE THE OLD MASTERS

The creative team of Jeff Koons and Louis Vuitton have combined their talents to give us "a novel way to experience the old masters."

They have reproduced old master paintings on the side of $4,000 Louis Vuitton handbags.  According to the creators, this "invites viewers to consider these works anew, opening the museum to the world."



Jeff Koons further explains, "When somebody walks down the street with this bag, or sits in a cafe with this bag, it's communicating a love of humanism."

Each handbag has been "emblazoned with the name of the original artist spelled out in gold letters." This feature is not even available on the original painting in the museum!

The creators also improved on the painting by attaching Louis Vuitton's signature flower symbols and  Monogram logo, then went the extra mile by creating a new version of the Vuitton logo incorporating Jeff Koons' initials.



As if these advances weren't enough, the restless creative minds of Koons and Vuitton have added "a tag in the silhouette of one of Koons' best-known artworks, the inflatable Rabbit sculpture."


While I am thrilled beyond measure by these new inspirations, still I must question whether the effect of these handbags is truly "novel."  I believe you can create the exact same impression by wearing one of these:



Saturday, April 20, 2019

WHAT DO THESE 70 ILLUSTRATIONS HAVE IN COMMON?


Dean Cornwell

Skidmore
James Montgomery Flagg
Pruett Carter

Gruger
Harrison Fisher


















                            










Charles Mitchell













































Richard Flanagan






  






Answer: they were all in a typical issue of Cosmopolitan magazine in the 1920s.  (In this case, September 1923).