Saturday, July 01, 2006

A FEW INTERESTING PICTURES


A friend turned me on to this killer WW2 syphilis poster (above). I don't know the artist's name.


Here's a detail (above) of a painting I'm especially fond of, Delacroix's "Orphan in the Graveyard." The girl looks stupid to me but she's portrayed with great nobility as if the artist was saying, "Even a girl like this is a human being and as such she has a divine spark and the potential for greatness."

Here (above) is the whole Delacroix picture. Below is an old drawing by John K where he's trying to out-Woverton Basil Wolverton.


15 comments:

  1. Eddie! I love your blog! I’ve been catching up with it, listening to a robot speak it while I paint

    I'm getting an accelerated education in cartoon history from you people. I used to feel like it was a secret world or something where all the kids were too cool for me. Oh I was so blind!

    I love Delacroix, have you read his journals? They’re quite compulsive… he was a temperamental French moody bastard alright, but in a good way… he had all those crazy colour theories all of his own, which I identify with, and he was always badmouthing the snotty repressed Salon lot.

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  2. Anonymous5:04 AM

    "She may be...a bag of TROUBLE" Hahaha! She's giving me that sultry look and now I'm a little scared. God help any girl that resembled that poster.

    Something that always strikes me about the orphan girl in that Delacroix painting is how petite she is. I guess it's the small forehead and gaping mouth that makes her look stupid. Yet her bright eyes and rosy complexion make her look healthy and vibrant. I think she's quite pretty.

    As far as the last pic...Boy would I hate to be that guy's dentist. I'd imagine his breath would smell as bad as his skull-faced foreskin hahaha!

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  3. Anonymous5:38 AM

    Sister Wendy's got nothing on you, Eddie! You should lead a tour at the Norton Simon discussing classic painting. I'd be there.

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  4. Anonymous10:58 AM

    Man the first posier is BAD ASS i love it !!!

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  5. It's amazing to me that back in the Forties, advertisements could be works of Art.

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  6. Good God - Delacroix and John K on the same page... amazing!

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  7. I love those WWII era posters.. The cartoons from that time were crazy anti jazz pro war propaganda too.. crazy shit..

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  8. Anonymous4:09 PM

    I see the wages of poverty and abandoment portrayed--hunger, a gaunt face, malnourishment, and a yearing for her lost parents. Idiocy I wouldn't have thought of first...hmmm.

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  9. >> It's amazing to me that back in the Forties, advertisements could be works of Art.<<

    I agree. The skill was so far out there from what we get today in advertisements, it's crazy.

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  10. Cool drawing by John K. It looks like John's take on an early Fleischer cartoon.

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  11. Anonymous1:58 AM

    >>I see the wages of poverty and abandoment portrayed--hunger, a gaunt face, malnourishment, and a yearing for her lost parents. Idiocy I wouldn't have thought of first...hmmm.<<

    Wow! You saw all that without reading about the painting in an art book first? That's quite amazing! How perceptive you are!

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  12. Hee hee! The girl at the top looks like Victor Mature in a wig.

    Great post.

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  13. Anonymous7:33 AM

    I'd like to see more posts about your art heroes! It's nice to see guys like Rubens and Delacroix being used to explain cartoon theories, because they are definitely interrelated.

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  14. Chloe: I guess you have a Mac because my PC has no comparable program for reading text out loud. I'm envious! Thanks for the tip about Delacroix's diaries. I'll look it up!

    Eddie

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  15. Anonymous1:19 PM

    I love "Mr. Browne" dearly. He's so sweet! A lover of humanity and an altruistic keeper of the Theory comments page! It's very encouraging.

    And so very perceptive, too, by golly!

    What's YOUR problem, bub? Or is there....a BOOK I can consult. Naff off.

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