Thursday, March 10, 2011

Molly's turn: A Wonderful Mother and Artist Remembered, Virginia Irvin

Gini working on bust of her sister Barbara
from sketchbook early 1950's
rough for color drawing using Gini's children Christie and Jamie
color drawing completed
San Francisco looking towards Coit Tower
Gini Working at The Seattle Times
Golden Gate Fields for the S.F. Examiner
This work done on commission for a Doctor's office
one of many drawings of models for the newspapers
Looking across S.F. towards the bay
Gini modeling for a Lily Co.
Home on Potereo Hill
drawing herself
Gini loved to use Japanese Ink Stick
Here again the Japanese Ink Stick
Pensive Virginia
Bolinas, California
daughter Molly, age 16, playing guitar
Mozart
This sheep is from a small sketchbook
Virginia's surprise 70th Birthday Party in Fairfax
Gini was an avid life drawing participant
these are just a few examples of her many many beautiful nudes
Virginia at her home in Fairfax     circa 2000
The month of March marks the 2nd anniversary of my Mother's death.  She was a huge influence in my life and I know she had many friends who felt the richer for knowing her.  She was born to artists, so it was natural and very comfortable for her to draw, she drew like we breath.  She was never without a sketch book throughout her active life and loved to record everything going on around her.  She was so adept at the quick sketch that many newspaper (San Francisco Examiner, Seattle Times, Portland Oregonian) hired  her as their "artist on the spot".  These are some of my favorite drawings by her as well as some photos which capture her lovely, serene self.  From these photos you would never know what a wacky sense of humor she had- but she did!  I miss my best friend.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Larry’s Cartoon Vault Pt II: The Cartooning Correspondence Courses



In the last post I focused on the early 20th century cartoon instruction books.
Those booklets were easily accessible and were for most young hopeful cartoonists the only educational outlet available-- with the exception of the mail-order cartoon courses.
The premier correspondence course was Charles N. Landon’s Landon School of Illustration and Cartooning. Landon, a veteran cartoonist of The Cleveland Press and art director of NEA (the Newspaper Enterprise Association) probably wasn’t the first to offer a correspondence course in cartooning but his was most certainly the most successful.
The roster of graduates includes many of the most renowned comic strip, editorial and magazine cartoonists of the 1930’s,40’s and ‘50’s.
Among them were Milton Caniff , Bill Maudlin, Merrill Blosser, Floyd Gottfredson, Edwina Dumm, Carl  Barks, Jack Cole, Gil Fox, Chic Young , V.T. Hamlin, Gene Byrnes, Clifton Meek, Roy Crane, Dorman H. Smith (who started his own mail-order course years later –see previous post), Stanley Link, Edgar Martin, Ethel Hays and Bill Holman.  
Here from the Cartoon Vault is a sampling of the Landon correspondence course.



Landon placed ads in a variety of magazines such as Cartoons Magazines.



Students received lessons on a regular basis.














Students returned work for evaluation.




Landon also published Pen and Ink Magazine which published students work.










Sunday, February 6, 2011

Larry's Cartoon Vault: Cartoon Instruction Books


In the olden days –the first half of the 20th century-- if you wanted to become a cartoonist you would find few places that  offered formal training in comic art (Unlike today. Now students can study cartooning, animation or the aesthetics of the graphic novel at a variety of institutions including  the Center for Cartoon Studies, CalArts  and the Kubert  School of Cartoon and Graphic Art).
Young hopefuls used to rely on correspondence art schools such as the Landon School of Illustration and Cartooning, Correspondence Institute of America, W.L.Evans School of Cartooning or they purchased one of the many how-to instruction booklets.

Below is a sampling from my archives of some early cartoon instruction books:


This one is by George Lichty 1944

This series is by the great George Carlson



Dorman H. Smith was a fine editorial cartoonist.
He lived out the latter years of his life right here in Fairfax, Ca.

1938

Billy Hon from 1927
A caricature of Billy Hon by San Francisco cartoonist Douglas Rodger


Someone left clear evidence of the cartooning student learning curve.

Frank Webb 1948


Chuck Thorndike published numerous such booklets.
This one is from 1936
 
Ed Cullen's ultra-strange Kartoon Kadoodler concept.
It comes with a plastic "Kadoodler" template. 1951



by J.A. Patterson


from Cartoonist's Exchange 1941

by Gerald Findler. Published in London.
by Charles Stoner 1941

  by veteran Chas. Kuhn the creator of the Grandma comic strip.
This one is from 1921