Showing posts with label 30's and earlier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 30's and earlier. Show all posts

Friday, July 8, 2011

Animated stereoviews of old Japan

SOURCE   Pink Tentacle - Click here to go to original post

In the late 19th and early 20th century, enigmatic photographer T. Enami (1859-1929) captured a number of 3D stereoviews depicting life in Meiji-period Japan.


A stereoview consists of a pair of nearly identical images that appear three-dimensional when viewed through a stereoscope, because each eye sees a slightly different image. This illusion of depth can also be recreated with animated GIFs like the ones here, which were created from Flickr images posted by Okinawa Soba. Follow the links under each animation for the original stereoviews and background information.




















Monday, May 16, 2011

FRANK R. PAUL: FATHER OF SCIENCE FICTION ART

SOURCE   Skiffy - Click here to go to original post



FRANK R. PAUL: FATHER OF SCIENCE FICTION ART is a modern volume published by Castle Books (New York) that contains a comprehensive history, critical essay and huge gallery of one of the most beloved SF artists. Contributors include ARTHUR C. CLARKE, SAM MOSKOWITZ and FORREST J. ACKERMAN.




Original artwork for LIFE ON NEPTUNE, from the back cover of FANTASTIC ADVENTURES, March 1940.




Artwork erroneously credited as appearing on the cover of
WONDER STORIES, June 1931. According to the book SCIENCE FICTION ART - THE FANTASIES OF SF by BRIAN ALDISS this was actually the cover for SCIENCE FICTION, December 1939 and depicted a scene from PLANET OF THE KNOB HEADS by STANTON A. COBLENTZ.

Harry Clarke (1) Tales of Mystery and Imagination

SOURCE   Sci-Fi-O-Rama - Click here to go to original post

Harry_Clarke_Poe_Tales_of_Mystery_and_Imagination

Harry_Clarke_Poe_Tales_of_Mystery_and_Imagination

Harry_Clarke_Poe_Tales_of_Mystery_and_Imagination

A small sample of Irish Illustrator’s Harry Clarke’s (1889–1931) work for Edgar Allan Poe’s “Tales of Mystery and Imagination” first published in 1923…

More notes coming soon…

Art Via http://ajourneyroundmyskull.blogspot.com” (an amazing blog!) full article here: http://ow.ly/JE9V

Originally spotted via butdoesitfloat.com

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Unsung Heroes of Commercial Art: Aviation Illustrators

SOURCE   ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive - Click here to go to original post



Aviation Art
Harper Goff

Last week, I posted an article about Harper Goff, the designer of Captain Nemo's Nautilus in Walt Disney's '20,000 Leagues Under The Sea'. A couple of days later, I was going through a stack of aviation prints to see if I could find an idea for a post, and I and stumbled across these amazing WWII era pantings by Goff. It made me think about the changing role of the commercial artist in society.

Back in the postwar era, the major aircraft builders employed illustrators to conceptualize how complex engineering would transform blueprints and raw materials into real-life massive flying machines. These talented illustrators would create fine art prints for the aerospace companies to give away as gifts to their clients and suppliers. Southern California swap meets are well stocked with these prints, and I've picked up a nice sized pile of them myself over the years.

Today, Photoshop and computer modeling has replaced these great technical artists, and a lot of the magic of flight has been replaced by dull literalism. On first glance, these images might seem super-realistic, but a closer look reveals the amazing technique and creative virtuosity involved in making watercolors evoke speed and power. Here's a facet of illustration history that I would like to know more about. If you have any information on these artists, please post to the comments at the end of this article.

Two more by Harper Goff...


Aviation Art

Aviation Art

CHARLES H. HUBBELL

Charles Hubbell had a lifelong love of aviation and art. As a child, his hobby was model airplane building, and by the time he was in High School, he had built himself a full scale glider. He attended the Cleveland School of Art in the early 1920s, and sold his paintings to pay for flying lessons. He became a licensed pilot and successful commercial artist. In the late 1930s, Hubbell was approached to combine his interests to illustrate a calendar depicting the winners of an annual air race. For the next three decades, Hubbell painted airplane calendars with terrific authenticity and attention to detail. In the course of his career he painted over 1000 images, which together comprise a fairly complete history of aviation.


Aviation Art
Aviation Art
Aviation Art
Aviation Art
Aviation Art

JACK LEYNNWOOD

If the art of Jack Leynnwood looks familiar, you are probably a baby boomer who had an interest in model kits growing up. Leynnwood's distinctive paintings on the Revell model kit box covers featured antique biplanes, WWII fighters, helicopters, modern jets and even space rockets. Leynnwood's images jumped off the shelf with their dramatic colors and lighting and dynamic momentum and motion blur. The wings of his airplanes would overlap the corners of the box, making it look like they were ready to fly away. He taught at Art Center College of Design, and passed away in 1999.


Aviation Art

Aviation Art

Aviation Art

Aviation Art

MORE AVIATION ARTISTS

Aviation Art
George Akimoto
Aviation Art
C.F. Coppock
Aviation Art
Crundall?
Aviation Art
MR?
Aviation Art
Alexander Leydenfrost
Aviation Art
?

Let me know in the comments if you have any information on these great artists, or if you'd like to see more aviation illustration.

Thanks
Stephen Worth
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive


Friday, May 13, 2011

Deep Water Days

SOURCE   Golden Age Comic Book Stories - Click here to go to original post


Deep Water Days
Published by Macrae Smith Company ~ 1929
Artwork by Charles Hargens, Frank Schoonover, Richard Rogers,
Stanley Arthurs, N. C. Wyeth and Manning de V Lee