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The Feather Collector

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A big thank you to my student Federica for sharing with me this beautiful book
by the French illustrator Isabelle Simler. I really enjoy the elegant spareness 
of the compositions, and the interesting balance between realism and stylization 
of the illustrations. Together with a variety of birds and their feathers, 
in each spread we get a peek at a mysterious black cat. This possibly dangerous 
creature at the end turns out to be a feather collector, and his presence 
is sure to make the reading more fun and exciting for young children. 













 Plumes was published last May in France by Éditions Courtes et Longues.



We Are Family

Franco Matticchio

Progressive Posters

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The Great Depression was a very difficult period for many, and affected a large number of American artists
 and graphic designers due to the lack of commercial work. In 1935 the US federal government
 created the Works Progress Administration (WPA) with the aim to provide job opportunities
for the unemployed as part of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal
The fall of the same year saw the launch of the WPA Federal Arts Project, which enabled visual artists, 
musicians, actors and writers to support themselves and pursue their professional careers. 


A poster project was included, and around 2,000 silkscreen, lithograph and woodcut posters were commissioned 
to promote health and safety, cultural events, travel and tourism, educational programs and community activities. 
The posters were produced across the nation, with the greatest output in California, New York, 
Illinois, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.


Two posters by Louise Welsh


Two posters by Carken

In many cases, the flat color of silkscreen combined with influences from the European avant-gardes
to produce strikingly graphic, bold Modernist designs that contrasted with the realistic illustrative style
 prevalent in most American graphic communication of the time.

Mildred Waltrip

Sidney Jacobson

Frank W. Long


Two posters by Hugh Stevenson

Robert Munchley

Arlington Gregg 

Frank S. Nicholson

Sidney Jacobson

J. Hirt

All of these posters were created between 1935 and 1939, when the Federal Arts Project was discontinued.
Fortunately, this great art series has recently been rediscovered and appreciated by many artists and designers. 
And wouldn't it be great if governments could also be inspired to provide a similar opportunity
 to survive and thrive in a time of crisis to the young talents of today? 

Happy in the Sun

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A very sweet 2004 video by Spike Jonze for Weezer,just because I'm in a very good mood!

Bat Beauty

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 I like bats and appreciate having them around our garden, but I am quite afraid
 of them. When I was a child I was told that bats can tangled into your hair,
a thought which filled me with horror. Even now that I know it's not true,
when a bat flies inside our window, I have to duck under a blanket.
But in many of these portraits, bats actually look quite cute!
  
Biho Takashi, Bat before the Moon, ca. 1910, via the Brooklyn Museum

Edward Gorey




Charles L. Ripper, Bats, 1954, and Maurice Sendak, The Bat-Poet, 1963, 





 Vladimir Fedotov, Whose legs?, 1970, and D. Chaikin, thanks to polny_shkaf





Józef Wilkon, Nietoperz, 1994




Janell Cannon, Stellaluna




Franco Matticchio

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Illustration from The Bat Poet by Randall Jarrell

Disconnections & Distractions

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Tony Meeuwisse

Just in case you worried about my sudden disappearance...
we just changed internet provider, and for a few days we had no connection.
I also idiotically lost access to my facebook account and had to recover it. 
Luckily, I took the opportunity to spend more time in the great outdoors, 
and embarked on some massive pruning and gardening projects.
It was actually a very lovely way to enjoy these last days of mild, 
wonderful autumn weather. I'll soon be back with lots of eye candy, 
in the meanwhile have a very Happy Halloween! 















One Last Bat

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It's too bad that I couldn't do this in time for Halloween,
but I am still very happy to present you Tallula, queen of the night
She is the protagonist of the latest picture book written by Adam Jaromir,
the author of Zarafa and Fantje, and co-founder of Gimpel Verlag.
The great Józef Wilkon painted the illustrations, and 
Dorota Novacka created the distinctive typography.





„Ba… ba... barbastelle!?“, wonders Tallula,
„I don't know anybody by that name.“
Will she ever find her family and friends?
And will her new glasses be of such a great help?





Old Dogs

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I am sorry to have missed Vecchi Cani, the recent exhibition of drawings
by Giovanna Durì at the Nuages Gallery in Milan (the same space that regularly 
features the shows of Matticchio). Durì is a well known graphic designer 
and exhibition designer, and this show was her coming out as an artist. 
The dogs portrayed were met in friends' homes, streets, parks, and kennels.  



After all we've been through last Summer, I was deeply moved 
by the sadness and tenderness in the eyes of these sweet old dogs, 
and by Durì's loving gaze towards them. 










 Vecchi Cani is also a book published by Nuages.


High Tea

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Dasha Gerasimova, thanks to Russian Season Kid's Books

Having been a US resident for nine years, I always follow American politics 
with great interest, which often turns to concern. Now that the election is over, 
I can finally relax and celebrate with a proper Tea Party!

Eugen Osswald, Ball der Tiere (The Animals' Ball), 1917,


Richard Scarry, The Country Mouse and the City Mouse, 1961, thanks to julielion

John Burningham, thanks to A Polar Bear's Tale

Svetozar Ostrov, cover for Have you ever listened to the silence, hedgehog?
1987, written by the author of Hedgehog in the Fog Sergei Kozlov
(thanks to Mark Kats for the correction)

O. Zotor, Little Fly So Sprightly, 1977

Judith KerrThe Tiger Who Came for Tea, 1968


Omar RayyanTea Party








Franco Matticchio

Hats, Scarves & Mittens

Happy Clays

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I am usually pretty picky when it comes to ceramic animal figurines, but if I had the means
I would love to collect the entire production of Swedish ceramic artist Lisa Larson.
All these creatures would make very happy companions to my (or any) home...

Lisa Larson was born in 1931 in Härlunda in southern Sweden. In the early 1950s 
she studied at the College of Crafts and Design in Gothenburg, and in 1953 was hired 
by the established porcelain manufacture Gustavsberg. There, she had the great opportunity
 to work under the famous Swedish ceramic artist Stig Lindberg, who discovered and nourished
 her unique talent. During her 27 years at Gustavsberg Larson created hundreds of different designs.


The very first collection of Lisa’s figures to be put into production in 1955 was Lilla Zoo

While Larson designed various ceramic wares, she became famous thanks to her wonderful
 animal figurines. Her creatures, both domestic and exotic, were immensely popular with the public, 
and during the 1960s and 70s she was an important PR personality for Gustavsberg.

Zebra from Stora Zoo, 1958

A cow, a donkey and a bulldog expanded the Stora Zoo collection in 1960

Tiger from the 1959 Afrika Series

Rhino from the 1966 Maanageri series

Camel from the 1971 Jura series

Shin-tzu from the 1972 Kennel series

Lisa's animal portaits are always very stylized and while most are playfully caricatured with exaggerated features,
some of her creatures, like the ones in the Skansen series, display a moving vulnerability.


 The purpose of the 1978 Skansen series was to celebrate the northern animals 
and raise awareness of the need to protect them. 

This European Bison is one of a series of animals threatened by extinction produced in 1978
 by Gustavsberg for the World Wildlife Fund and the Swedish department store Nordiska Kompaniet.

Penguins from the 1979 Noah's Ark series

In 1981 Larson left Gustavsberg to work freelance as a sculptural artist and designer 
for various Swedish companies and the German porcelain manufacturer Rosenthal.

Moses by Gustavsberg Ceramic Studio 

In 1992 she founded the Gustavsberg Ceramic Studio with her colleagues Franco Nicolosi and Siv Solin. 
Their ceramics are produced on a small scale by a team of master craftsmen and women   
who carry on the traditional crafts of mold making, glazing and hand painting. 
Lisa Larson is still actively working on creating and producing new ceramic designs, 
while her body of work is being discovered and rediscovered by many outside 
her native country, and sought after by antique dealers and collectors.
 

Like Cats & Dogs

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And I could go on and on and on...

It's been a very entertaining couple of months around our home,
as Seba and I follow with endlessly fascination the fast evolving relationship
between Chapi and the new puppy. I am so happy that they like each other!

Marjorie Flack, Angus and the Cat, 1932

Kathleen Hale, 1949

 Barbara CooneyLucy and Loki1958



Leonard Weisgard, Who Ever Heard of Kangaroo Eggs, 1957, 







Robert Quackenbush, Horatio, 1868, thanks to art.crazed

Benjamin Rabier, Rabougri, 1929, thanks to Agence eureka

John Burningham, Cannonball Simp1966

Clement Hurd, The Merry Chase, 1941

Cecile Boyer, Ouf, miao, cui-cui

W.T. Cummings, Wickford of Beacon Hill, 1962, thanks to Arthur van Kruining



Franco Matticchio

Mad Men & Crazy Critters - Shoe Fetish

King of the Barnyard

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Istvan Banyai, Zoom 

Károly Reich, thanks to Sun Tear on kidpix


Vyaceslav Legkobit (I have already posted this one, but it's such an happy picture)


K.Ovchinnikov, 1989

Lidija Glinskiené, Little Fire, Conqueror of Seven, 1965

Andrzej Owsiński, Zwierzeta, via polska ilustracja dla dzieci

David Leonard, thanks to Letslookupandsmile



two illustrations from Carlos Marchiori's Sally Go Round the Sun, thanks to bookvart

Ray Garrod, via Retro Graphic Design


Rooster lovers can also visit our previous galleries here, here and here


Franco Matticchio

The Conquest of the Earth

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Duilio Cambellotti, one of the most significant and eclectic Italian artists 
of the early 20th century, was born in Rome in 1876 and began developing 
his craft skills at the workshop of his father Antonio, a wood carver and decorator.
 After studying at the Museum of Industrial Art in Rome he began working as 
a graphic artist, and in 1897 received a diploma to teach Applied Arts. 


Cambelotti started to work as an independent designer creating objects, lamps and jewels 
in the Art Nouveau style for Italian and International companies, as well as advertising posters. 
Inspired by the ideals of the Arts and Crafts movement, he devoted himself with enthusiasm
 to all the applied arts, constantly researching and mastering new media and techniques. 


He was also one of the most prolific and innovative illustrators of his time,
and his works were regularly featured in various important literary magazines.
Around 1913 he began illustrating fairy tales and children's books 
for several important Italian publishers. 


From 1905 until the late 1940s Cambellotti designed sets and costumes for theaters
 including the Opera of Rome and the amphitheaters at Ostia, Taormina, and Syracuse.
His wide range of creative activities also included painting, printmaking, murals, 
sculpture, stained glass, architecture, interior decoration, and ceramics. 

Bull tile, 1910-12

Cambellotti felt a strong bond with the rural world, a recurring subject in his art. 
In these rural roots he found a sense of timeless authenticity lacking in contemporary society. 
However, he was conscious of the backward living condition that characterized that world, 
and together with his friend Alessandro Marcucci and the writers Giovanni Cena and Sibilla Aleramo 
he was actively involved in fighting the miserable situation of farmers in the Roman and Pontine Marshes
Among the works reflecting these themes, I have only recently discovered these woodcuts
 designed by Cambellotti for the covers of The conquest of the earth, a magazine  published
 by the Fascist organization Opera Nazionale Combattenti between 1935 and 1939. 











Throughout this vast body of work, the animal world remains one of Cambellotti's 
main sources of inspiration. And naturally, I'll share more of his art in the near future...


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