Philly-Bob’s Free-for-All 2016

One man's visual art, largely consisting of digital manipulations of images taken from my own photographs or downloaded from the Public Domain.

Portrait by Remo Frangiosa

Artist's Statement

Although I have been interested in art and graphic design all my life, I only began working seriously after I retired in 2010. The images in Philly-Bob's Free-for-All are digital manipulations of images. The images are either from the Public Domain or from my own archives of photos I have taken.

My images are strongly influenced by the optical textures I see when I close my eyes and by what I see when I dream. They are also influenced by the hallucinatory visions I saw under the influence of anaesthesia following open heart surgery.

I often use commercial art, illustration, and typography as a source of ideas.

For maximum effect with my images, click repeatedly on the image until it is full-size, which may be larger than your computer screen.


One More Reason Not to Fall


Sources:
NA
October 15, 2016
Risky River Duty During Vietnam War


Sources:
NA
October 15, 2016
Pious Young Margitte from Goethe's Faust


Sources:
NA
October 15, 2016
Dutchman's Pipe and Poisonous Mushrooms

I was pleased with the look of the Oct. 9 Philly Bob's Free-for-All entry, Hottes Green Pole and Catalog Pecans. Here I follow the same simple two-layer graphic recipe: (1) a background consisting of a colored nature illustration and (2) a foreground consisting of a monochrome illustration of plants, with the colors inverted.
The background in this piece is a colored illustration of two poisonous mushrooms, Lurid Boletus and Satanic Boletus. Some Boletus mushrooms are edible, but not these two. The source is the 1902 Edible and poisonous mushrooms : what to eat and what to avoid (Link1).
The foreground shows the flowers and leaves of an Aristolochia Ringens plant, known as the "Dutchman's Pipe" for its resemblance to old-fashioned Meerschaum pipes, seen in the bulbuos shape in the lower left corner. It is from the 1902 Vergleichende morphologie der pflanzen (Link2; Google Translate: " Comparative morphology of plants").
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/ediblepoisonousm00cook_0
Link2 archive.org/details/vergleichendemor34vele
October 19, 2016
Woman in Winter Coat Examines Nude Sculpture

One of the darker places in the Public Domain landscape is an online collection of German books and magazines from the Nazi era. The ideology is objectionable and the human toll of the events those ideas produced is heartbreaking. As my WWII European-theatre vet father said, "The United States may have signed a peace treaty with the Nazis, but Charlie Moore never did!" The Fraktur typography of that era is often unreadable to the modern eye. But the quality of the monochrome photography is often high. Here is a photo from a 1942 book called Hitlerjugend - Das Erlebnis einer großen Kameradschaft (Link1; Google Translate: "Hitler Youth - The experience of a large fellowship"). The propaganda book, seeking to demonstrate the high cultural level in the wartime Reich, shows a woman in a fur coat and fashionable hat leaning forward to study a large statue of a naked girl.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SautterReinholdHitlerjugendDasErlebnisEinerGrossenKameradschaft1942321S.ScanFraktur
October 18, 2016
Dancer before Ferns

In the background, two drawings of ferns from the 1879 The ferns of North America. Colored figures and descriptions, with synonymy and geographical distribution, of the ferns (including the Ophioglossaceæ) of the United States of America and the British North American possessions (Link1). A book filled with lovely color drawings.
In the foreground, dancer Mary Kissel as she appeared in the 1922 operetta The Rose of Stamboul. The picture was on the cover of a 1922 issue of Broadway periodical Pantomime (Link2). Kissel was a member of a dance troupe called the Gertrude Hoffman Girls. When the troupe appeared in France, surrealist Paul Eluard wrote this poem to them:

Les Gertrude Hoffman Girls

Gertrude, Dorothy, Mary, Claire, Alberta,
Charlotte, Dorothy, Ruth, Catherine, Emma,
Louisa, Margaret, Ferral, Harriet, Sarah,
Nude Florence, Margaret, Thelma and Toots:

Night-birds, fire-birds, rain-birds all,
Trembling heart, hidden hands, and eyes to the wind,
You show me the movements of light;
You exchange a clear glance for the spring,

The turn of your waist for the whorl of a flower,
Boldness and danger for your shadowless flesh;
You trade love for the thrills of a sword flash
And welling laughter for the promise of dawn.

Your dances are the frightening gulf of my dreams
And I sink and my fall makes eternal my life,
The space beneath your feet grows vast and vaster;
Marvels, you dance upon the springs of the sky!


Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/fernsofnorthamer02eato
Link2 archive.org/details/PantomimeMay271922
October 18, 2016

Six Views of One of Botticelli's Three Graces
 
An arrangement of a woman's head, the middle of the "Three Graces" seen to the left of Sandro Botticelli's painting Primavera ("Spring"); the full painting is on the right. The 1482 painting is described as "one of the most popular paintings in Western Art." The detail of the superbly-coiffed head appears in the 1922 Malerei der Renaissance in Italien (Link1; Google Translate: "Renaissance painting in Italy").
The six variations of the head are anachronistically placed in sample slide templates presented in the 1931 Making Titles And Editing Your Cine Kodak Films(Link2). The names of the slide designs are (clockwise from top left) "soft pastel," "gayly colored fantastic," "softly colored sunset," "deeply colored Moorish tile," "modernistic," "rich stained glass."
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/malereiderrenais11unse
Link2 archive.org/details/MakingTitlesAndEditingYourCineKodakFilms1931
October 17, 2016
Kazakh Boy in War

In the center, is the face of a boy, a sepia ink drawing from the Kazakhstan travel journal of exiled Ukrainian artist and poet Taras Shevchenko. It appear in a 2002 edition of The Journal of Ukrainian Studies (Link1). The drawing is captioned "Katia the Kazak." The boy holds a decorated box or brazier (right). Around the boy's face is the plan of a military fort from the 1684 Les travaux de Mars, ou, L'art de la guerre: divisé en trois parties: avec un ample détail de la milice des Turcs, tant pour l'attaque que pour la deffence (Link2; Google Translate: "The work of Mars, or, The art of war: divided into three parts: with ample detail of the militia of the Turks, both for that attack for defence."). At the bottom of the picture is a battle scene from the same book, which seems to show soldiers mixed with ranchers and farmers. The wavy background is a pattern from an undated book of crafts and decoration Album seni budaya Aceh (Link3: Google Translate: "Album art and culture of Aceh"). Aceh is a province of Indonesia.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/journalofukraini2712cana
Link2 archive.org/details/gri_33125010544001
Link3 archive.org/details/ACEH02505
October 16, 2016
Bandaged Patient in Tool Catalog

The orange color and underlying graphics are from the cover of a 1929 catalog Good Tools Since 1836: Heller Brothers Co. (Link1). The overlying pattern is a detail taken from one of Heller's tools, a "chain wrench" used to hold or turn pipes -- repeated and flipped four times. (The catalog calls it a "cantilever wrench"). Heller, of Newark, NJ, eventually moved to Ohio. It stayed in business until 1955, when it was sold to Simonds International.
The figure inserted five time is a diagram from an 1867 book of medical techniques, Mechanical therapeutics: a practical treatise on surgical apparatus, appliances, and elementary operations (Link2), showing a young girl with a long, winding bandage on her shoulder (scapula).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/HellerBrothers1929
Link1 archive.org/details/mechanicaltherap1867wale
October 15, 2016
Dr. Kinsey and Kenneth Anger visit Aleister Crowley Villa

There is an American conservative writer named Judith Reisman who has gone on a campaign to debunk modern sex education and, especially, the "pansexual" results of Alfred Kinsey, the 1940's sex researcher. Here is a remarkable photo from Reisman's 2003 book Kinsey: Sex and Fraud, Crimes And Consequences (Link1). It shows Kinsey, left, visiting avant-garde filmmaker Kenneth Anger at the Sicilian home of deceased occultist Aleister Crowley, depicted in a photograph hanging on the wall, at center. Anger spent a summer there removing the whitewash that Benito Mussolini had ordered applied over Crowley's sexually explicit and occult wall murals. Reisman uses the photo to argue the influence of Satanism and sexual deviancy over American education. One thing for sure: the photo is dramatically lit.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/ReismanJudithAnnKinseyCrimesAndConsequences
October 12, 2016
Victorian Revery on Greek Dancers

Ooops. This image is composed of three pictures from an 1894 issue of Aglaia : the journal of the Healthy and Artistic Dress Union (Link1). Unfortunately, after I did the image, I noticed that it was marked "Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0" (See explanation here). I'm cool with the attribution and I get no money from it. But unquestionably, it is a derivative of the original images, and according to that license, "if you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you may not distribute the modified material." So I hereby withdraw it. So please don't copy or redistribute it. Look at the Source, however. It is an interesting document. The publisher, Healthy and Artistic Dress Union, was a radical movement in its time.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/krl00000763
October 12, 2016
All Saws: Rip, Cross-Cut, Coping

This is one of those abstract periods in my life, when I'm more interested in pattern, composition, and color than in meaning and context. Here, for instance, is an image composed solely of four illustrations from a 1916 catalog of Saws Knives Files Steel(Link1) from Simonds Manufacturing Company of Fitchburg, Massachusetts. My father was a Junior High Woodshop teacher. I remember well the sweet smell and soft texture of sawdust -- back in the days before they used sawdust to make "wood product" for cheap particle board furniture. "Particle board is cheaper, denser and more uniform than conventional wood and plywood and is substituted for them when cost is more important than strength and appearance." (Wikipedia)
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SimondsSawsKnivesFilesSteel1916Catalog
October 10, 2016
Esoteric Symbols and A Surgeon's Knot

I find the fertile imaginations of occultists and spiritualists fascinating, although I don't believe much of what they believe. Their extravagant simplifications -- for example, Earth/Air/Fire/Water, or Soul/Matter -- can be useful and stimulating, but they are not a solid foundation for navigating the modern world.
In this imager, the background is a chart of magical icons from the 1910 El Simbolismo Hermetico (Link1), a book explaining the many symnbols and icons of hermeticism. Hermeticism is the "religious, philosophical, and esoteric tradition based primarily upon writings attributed to Hermes Trismegistus." The book's subtitle says it includes a discussion of the symbols' relationship to Freemasonry and Alchemy. The background image contains everything from a bare-breasted mermaid to a fist squeezing water from a stone, plus zodiac symbols. The text is Spanish; an English-language version of similar material is Manly P. Hall's 1928 Secret Teachings of All Ages.
In the left is a large commanding figure of a woman with sword and quill pen, apparently a stock printer's ornament (Link2).
In the middle, seemingly entwined around the woman's arm, is a simple slip-knot from the 1867 Mechanical therapeutics: a practical treatise on surgical apparatus, appliances, and elementary operations (Link3).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/OswaldWirthElSimbolismoHermetico
Link2 Source NA
Link3 archive.org/details/mechanicaltherap1867wale
October 9, 2016
Hottes Green Pole and Catalog Pecans

In the foreground, in white, is a 1954 drawing by Alfred C. Hottes of a Parkinsonia plant, a desert variety of pea known also as Palo Verde ("Green Pole"). The drawing is from a 1954 issue of California Garden (Link1). Hottes was a horticulturalist at Ohio State who moved to California when he retired and did marvelous plant drawings. I previously discussed Hottes' work on Free for All, in postings on December 29 and 30, 2013.
The drawing is superimposed on a chart of pecan varieties from a colorful 1920 catalog by Florida-based Glen Saint Mary Nurseries Company (Link2). Wikipedia says that "Pecans were one of the most recently domesticated major crops. Although wild pecans were well known among the colonial Americans as a delicacy, the commercial growing of pecans in the United States did not begin until the 1880s." The catalog's text says that, at that time (1920), demand for the nut far exceeded supply.
What is the purpose of these bibliographical notes? Besides citing sources (and thus acknowledging the artists and craftspeople of the public domain past), they are an attempt to move beyond the "pretty picture" of art into the more complicated but equally fascinating world of history, economics, and human achievement. These notes also express my pleasure in writing English prose. Someday, when I grow up, I want to be a writer.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/calgarden1954vol45no4
Link2 archive.org/details/CAT31303879
October 9, 2016
A Repost: San Francisco de Assis
 
From the December 1924 issue of the Cuban magazine Social, a painting of St. Francis of Assisi by Mexican artist Garcia Cabral. The subject and the artist's treatment are so devout that I present a respectful treatment of the black-and-white original.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SocialVolIXNo12Diciembre1924
August 6, 2016
Update:
October 4, 2016
Today is the feast day of St. Francis of Assisi in the Roman Catholic calendar, and to honor it, my neighbor and friend Tony ("Two-Canes") Macchia and I collaborated on what we used to call a "holy card" in my Catholic childhood. We printed a small card -- about the size of a playing card -- with the Cabral painting on the front, and two texts on the back: (1) a simple prose appreciation by an atheist (me) and (2) a poem by a deeply devoted Catholic (Tony). Our own ecumenical gesture.

My prose:
Francis of Assisi is an admirable historical figure, a 13th-century Italian monk who turned away from the violence of the Crusades, devoted his life to the poor, and advocated respect for all living things. He traveled to Egypt to negotiate for peace during the Crusades. Our current Pope is the first to choose that name.
   — Bob Moore

Tony's poem:
Francesco is one of us.
Pitched his tent
in the Cloud of Unknowing.
The Source of Pure Love that
transforms every Wolf of Gubbio
frees every Turtle Dove of Siena
embraces every Leper
blesses every Sultan
heals every Heart
cherishes every Brother Juniper
creates Cosmos out of every Chaos.
Ah! St. Francis, walk with us!
   — Tony Macchia

Francis' most significant contribution to modern culture is probably his Canticle of the Sun.
Just Dont Fall, Friends II
 
My continuing plea to one and all: Just Dont Fall. The image is a Gothic staircase from Antwerp, from an 1842 edition of the architectural magazine The Builder (Link1). The text is in Antar techno font by Andrew Young of Disaster Fonts.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006201780
October 4, 2016
SHOW BIZ: Wartime Pinups, Silent Movie Lesbians, Abandoned Projects, Mirrors, Etc.


My work routine on Philly-Bob's Free-for-All project is to harvest images from the latest files uploaded to the public domain and then process them into digitally-manipulated images, along with explanatory prose citing the sources. The subject matter of my output varies according to the public domain input. Well, it just so happens that the Media History Digital Library recently uploaded a lot of film magazines from the early days of cinema -- 60 to 100 years ago -- to the public domain. So I will be doing Show Biz for a while -- the manufactured glamour of yesteryear's photogenic faces. Any pretension at seriousness and high art hereby disappear. I have contempt for cultural critics who gossip with such urgency on the doings of today's transitory celebrities like the Kardashians -- but allow myself to do the same in retrospect.

First is a studio publicity shot of Lynn Bari from a 1939 studio magazine, 20th Century-Fox Dynamo (Link1), announcing her casting in The Return of the Cisco Kid. The actress never made it to the top tier of American movie stars, but she did rank high as a World War II pin-up, second only to Betty Grable. She was given the nickname The Woo Woo Girl and, when asked about it, said "The audiences, the public, continue to remember me, and what greater accolade can an actress get?" You can watch Bari play a femme fatale nurse to Vincent Price's murderous psychiatrist in the 1946 film noir Shock. Bari died at the age of 75.

Next is a photo of silent-film actress Grace Darmond from a 1917 Photoplay (Link2). The image has the characteristic white ink border of silent film titles. Darmond was not able to make the transition to "talkies." Darmond was said to be the lesbian lover of actress Jean Acker, the first wife of actor Rudolph Valentino, and was associated with the "sewing circles" (lesbian social groups) of Russian actress Alla Nazimova. Today's openness about homosexuality certainly makes history more interesting; witness the account of Acker abandoning Valentino on their wedding night and going to Darmond's house to declare her love. Darmond died at the age of 69.

Next from a lavishly-produced 1929 Radio Pictures Exhibitors Book (Link3), an illustration for a planned movie, "tentatively titled" Sensation. As far as I can tell the movie was never produced. The description is breathtaking proto-feminism: "The drama they dared not write ... until today. Woman's heart!... Woman's soul!... Woman's flesh...her own at last....no longer the pawn of puny man!... Unshackled... she plants her feet on the checkerboard of life and moves whither? ALL DIALOG... AND A WORLD OF WOMEN WAITING TO HEAR IT!" [Punctuation as in original]

Next three actresses combined in one image. Seated in the foreground in the checkered dress is English actress Ann Todd (1909-1993), from a June 1946 Pictures (Link4). Behind Todd, on the left, is character actress Helen Jerome Eddy (1897-1990), from a 1918 issue of Photoplay World (Link5); and behind Todd on the right is silent film actress and fashion icon Valeska Suratt (1882-1962), from a 1917 issue of Photoplay Journal (Link6).
In the next row, the first image is a silent-movie actress Dorothy Dalton, sitting before a folding mirror, examining her face in a hand mirror -- three (or is it four?) variations of the same motif. The image is from a 1917 Photoplay magazine (Link7). The scene is combined with color samples from Sears Interior/Exterior Acrylic Enamels (Link8).

Second image in that row features a circular portrait of silent movie actress Emmy Wehlen from a 1918 issue of Photoplay World (Link9). She is displayed against (top) two ornamental panels consisting of a sketch based on the hawthorn plant, from an 1842 issue of The Builder (Link10) and (bottom) a slab of stone decorated with a "vermiculated" (worm-eaten) pattern from the 1921 Building Stone: Foundations-Masonry (Link11).
Next, a portrait of lesser-known silent-film actress Jean Downs (Link9) set against a decorative window from The Builder (Link10).

Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/dynamo08-1939-07-22
Link2 archive.org/details/photoplayjournal02-1917-10
Link3 archive.org/details/rkoexhibitorsbook1929-30
Link4 archive.org/details/picturesuniversal01-1946-06
Link5 archive.org/details/photoplayworld02-1918-12
Link6 archive.org/details/photoplayjournal02-1917-08
Link7 archive.org/details/photoplayjournal02-1917-08
Link8 archive.org/details/SearsInteriorexteriorAcrylicEnamels
Link9 archive.org/details/photoplayworld02-1918-12
Link10 archive.org/details/gri_33125006201798
Link11 archive.org/details/BuildingStoneFoundationsMasonry
October 1, 2016
JDF: Up and Down Spiral Stairway

From an 1842 edition of The Builder (Link1), an image of a double spiral staircase. The design allows both "ascent and descent without chance of meeting or collision," suitable for crowded shops or coffee houses. This one is decorated with a waist-high drape.
I use the stairway image (as I often do in my JDF series) to illustrate a continuing wish for all my friends and readers: Just Dont Fall.
The slogan appears at the bottom, in a 2012 Antar techno font by Andrew Young of Disaster Fonts. Young, from Manchester, England, says his fonts are "inspired mostly by the fascinating interface between dystopian and utopian science fiction. [They use] forms based on actual and imagined computer technology from the late 1960s." See Young's weird collection of inspirations at his Radiant Suicide Tumblr site.
Anyway, the message should be clear. You can embark on any madcap, romantic adventure that you so desire, live your life as you wish, enjoy (and even overdo) all the sensual and mental pleasures our human nature offers. But (especially at my age, when the bones become like porcelain china) Just Dont Fall. If you do, you enter a world of hurt and rubbing alcohol, a grim place where you are a helpless, bed-ridden, child-like patient, dependent on others.
Just Dont Fall.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006201749
September 30, 2016
Nazi Lymph Nodes, Rocking Chair Photo, Psuedoscience

The deep background, barely visible, is a unattributed refraction photo used by author David Hatcher Childress to illustrate the "geometrized light energy" nature of the material universe. Above that is an unattributed illustration of astronomer's tools (with astrolabe, telescope and map) also from Childress' book, Anti-Gravity and the World Grid (Link1). Childress describes himself as a "rogue archeologist." Others describe him (and I agree) as a "psuedoscientist." See his webpage for a sense of the range of his imaginative "explorations."
The small photo in the lower right is from the photographic library of the English community of East Reading at Flickr.com, labelled "Girl on rocking horse circa 1900. Taken in or around Beverley, East Yorkshire in the early 20th century by an unknown professional photographer." (Link2)
Finally, in the foreground, is an anatomical chart of the lymphatic system of a young woman, from the Nazi health manual Reichsjugendführung - Mädel im Gesundheitsdienst (2. Auflage 1941) (Link3; Google Translate: "Reich Youth Leadership - Girl in Health Care (2nd edition 1941)")
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/DavidHatcherChildressANTIGRAVITYANDTHEWORLDGRID
Link2 www.flickr.com/photos/erarchives/25202492994
Link3 archive.org/details/ReichsjugendfuehrungMaedelImGesundheitsdienst2.Auflage194192Doppels.Scan
September 29, 2016
English-language Koran for Kids

This image is a collage of illustrations from a series of children's books retelling the stories of the Koran and other Islamic traditions. Thirteen of these books are collected as Kids' Book Series - Quran Stories (Link1). The books retell many of the stories from the Christian bible, but with a twist. For instance, Eve's malignant role in the Garden of Eden story is reduced: she is not produced from Adam's rib but simultaneously with Adam, and the couple together are persuaded by Satan to taste the Forbidden Fruit, not Eve alone. The series' watercolor illustrations are well done -- although it is jarring that there are no depictions of people.
The series was published by Indian television host and children's author Saniyasnain Khan, son of Islamic scholar Wahiduddin Khan. The two seem to represent a more moderate branch of Islam and are associated with the Center for Peace and Spirituality, which published, for instance, the son's article refuting the basis used by radicals to decree death as a punishment for blasphemy. See also the father's article denying that jihad means war.
Sadly, one Islamic group has issued a fatwa against the two on doctrinal grounds; see page 4 of the linked PDF, calling for a boycott of the books. You can buy the books here.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/kisbse
September 28, 2016
Celebratory Bonfire, Sennett Swimsuit Cuties

An odd and probably incomprehensible combination of images, more of a dream scene than a purposeful illustration, despite the realism.
In the foreground, from the photographic library of the English community of East Reading at Flickr.com, a picture (Link1) of citizens standing by a pile of scrap logs and barrels meant for a bonfire. The caption explains "Relief of Mafeking bonfire," apparently celebrating the end of the 217-day Siege of Mafeking when English troops were encircled during the Second Boer War in Africa.
Above the woodpile and behind it, incongruously, is a publicity collage of silent film comedian Mack Sennett's bathing beauties, from a 1920 Mack Sennett's Weekly (Link2).
Sources:
Link1 www.flickr.com/photos/erarchives/25040166009
Link2 archive.org/details/macksennettweekly02-1920-03-15
September 27, 2016
Silent Movie Eyes on Russian Decoration

The frame is a decorative design from a book illustration by Russian artist Ivan Bilibin, found in a 1905 children's book Tsar Saltan (Link1; the Cyrillic original is unreadable). Bilibin was a superb illustrator and set designer, working in Russia, Paris, and Germany. He died during the 900-day German Siege of Leningrad and was buried in a mass grave.
Peeking through (and around) the design are the eyes of silent-movie actress Ethel Clayton from the cover of a 1914 Movie Pictorial magazine (Link2).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/TsarSaltan95795
Link2 archive.org/details/moviepictorial1914-09-05
September 26, 2016
Mystery Yorkshire Child with Stucco & Colonial China

The English community of East Riding recently uploaded its photographic library to the Flickr.com community archives. One of the images was this unidentified girl, looking a bit haunted, in a photo identified as Girl in Studio 1900 (Link1). Her image is placed with a photo of a corner cupboard filled with china from a Daughters of the American Revolution chapter, in a 1902 book called The New Industrialism (Link2), all set upon a background of stucco patterns from 1925 Straub cinder building blocks (Link3).
Sources:
Link1 www.flickr.com/photos/erarchives/25207299504
Link2 archive.org/details/gri_33125011120108
Link3 archive.org/details/NationalCinderConcreteProducts
September 26, 2016
Cache of Rings Discovered in Wall

From a jeweler's advertisement in a May 1915 Movie Pictorial (Link1), a selection of diamond rings, placed upon a hole knocked into a brick wall from a 1925 Straub cinder building blocks (Link2). For some reason, the bricks are marked with letters and numbers. In the lower right, there is an "Easter Egg," a barely visible visual element -- a Henri Cartier-Bresson photo of 16-year-old factory girl -- from an article on "The New Nation Of Indonesia" that appeared in a 1950 issue of Life Magazine (Link3).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/moviepictorial1915-05
Link2 archive.org/details/NationalCinderConcreteProducts
Link3 archive.org/details/lifeid
September 25, 2016
Movie Ads Competing for 1920's Eyeballs

In the 1920's, movie theatres were a major cultural institution and big business. They advertised their offerings in tiny display advertisements on crowded newspaper "Movies" listings. These combined locally-produced type with graphic material from studio-produced "press books." An article in the January 1927 Moving Picture World (Link1) discusses how to make an ad stand out among all the others, and provided these eight examples of well-designed advertisements. For instance, consider this discussion of the Flaming Forest ad, second from top in the far right column: "The line between the white and black [in the background] is too abrupt without excuse for such abruptness. As a rule so sharp a line of demarcation should be covered by rule work, and where rule would be out of place, the line should be broken up." The technical design talk is still instructive 90 years later, although the lingo ("rule work?") is dated.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/movingpicturewor84janf
September 21, 2016
Sandwich Lady

A young woman with a tray of tea and sandwiches from the 1935 Les délices de l'hôtesse (Link1), a cookbook from Colman Mustard in Montreal. Behind her, a pattern of bricks from the 1929 Plain and fancy brickwork (Link2).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-rbsc_delices-hotesse_tx819m87d451935rbdcook-16241
Link2 archive.org/details/PlainAndFancyBrickwork.
September 20, 2016
Turn-of-the-Last-Century Photo Gear

From a 1909 German catalog of photography and light projection technology, Die Projektions-Kunst (Link1; Google Translate: "The Projection Art"), three images show a man running a "magic lantern" projector displaying a bouquet on a wall (top) and two of the color slides (bottom) that make up the projected bouquet. In the center, from the same catalog, two components of a a panoramic projection setup: top, a set of projectors arranged in a circle; just below it, the circular image for projection onto a curved screen.
Next image, some magic lantern slides, placed on a picture of a ruined wartime troop transport from __ (Link2) and with a picture of a lady's leg surrounded by bubbles from ____ (Link3).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/DieProjektionsKunst
September 22, 2016
Misc: Molecules, Sorrows of Satan, Lya II, SpecCanal, Cache of Rings

Sources:
NA September 20, 2016
Astronomer Discovers Six Lunar Phases

On the right, an astronomer looks through his telescope from a 1930 Popular Science (Link1). To his left, at top, six buttons or broaches from a book of Austrian art and decoration (Link2). Below that, a maid carrying hot, steaming tea upon a serving tray from a 1933 Canadian Starch Co. cookbook, The New Edwardsburg recipe book (Link3). All placed upon a sample of wallpaper from the 1947 Montgomery Ward wallpaper book (Link4).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_xSgDAAAAMBAJ
Link2: Book identity NA
Link3 archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-rbsc_canada-starch_tx7156n491933rbdcook-16208
Link4 archive.org/details/MontgomeryWardWallpaper
September 20, 2016
Memento Mori

Occasionally, I go Goth -- death-obsessed, dark, melodramatic. OMG, folks, I'm going to die, isn't everything beautiful?. This is one of these pieces, after my cardiologist noticed some unusual glitches on my EKG that could indicate a condition where the sac surrounding the heart fills with fluid. The Wikipedia illustration of the condition is in the center, upon a strip of EKG tape. The background of the whole scene is a sample of children's room wallpaper from the 1947 Montgomery Ward wallpaper book (Link1). In the lower right is romantic "genre painter" Federico Andreotti's painting of a young woman wiping her tears (and apparently squeezing her tit) as her lover rides away. The picture is from an 1853 edition of Die Gartenlaube; illustrierte Familienblatt (Link2: Google Translate: "The gazebo; Illustrated Family Journal").
My EKG reading turned out to be a false positive. Which doesn't mean I'm not going to die or that I don't get to go Goth and melodramatic every once in a while!
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/MontgomeryWardWallpaper
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_xRw7AQAAIAAJbr
September 18, 2016
Canadian Pastries

Three images from a 1933 Canadian Starch Co. cookbook, The New Edwardsburg recipe book (Link1): a fashionable lady wheels out a dessert cart against a background of pancakes and syrup (top) and pineapple and cheese salad (bottom).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-rbsc_canada-starch_tx7156n491933rbdcook-16208
September 18, 2016
Hitler Girl Scouts

There was a girl's division of the Hitler Youth during World War II, the Jungmadelbund, for girls 10-14. A 1934 children's book Ursel und ihre Mädel (Link1; Translation: "Ursel and Her Maiden") romanticized the group's activities. Here are two of the illustrations from that book. They are placed on a background of a wallpaper from the 1947 Montgomery Ward wallpaper book (Link2). There are collections of photos of the young girls exercising in their gym clothes. See The Male Gaze. What is especially poignant is the cheery, pig-tailed kids know nothing of the grim futures ahead for them in a defeated Germany. The second image represents an experiment with the Gimp Stencil filter.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/MuellerEdithUrselUndIhreMaedelum193881S.ScanFraktur
Link2 archive.org/details/MontgomeryWardWallpaper
September 17, 2016
Ladies Teatime over Hinges & Hieroglyphics
     
Ladies having tea in an elegantly appointed living room, from a 1938 Life (Link1). The product being sold is the now-unfashionable coffee table with lyre-shaped legs. The lady sitting reminds me of my mother when she would get dressed up. The image is placed upon an illustration for an article on the proper selection of door hinges, from a 1930 issue of Popular Science (Link2) overlaid with Egyptian hieroglyphics from the 1852 Briefe aus Aegypten, Aethiopien und der Halbinsel des Sinai : geschrieben in den Jahren 1842-1845, während der auf Befehl Sr. Majestät des Königs Friedrich Wilhelm IV von Preussen ausgeführten wissenschaftlichen Expedition (Link3: Google Translate "Letters from Egypt Ethiopia and the peninsula of Sinai : written in the years 1842-1845 , during the on command of His Majesty the King Frederick William IV of Prussia executed scientific expedition").
Next image, a reworking of the same material, with a stray thought in Cafeteria, which is a nice-looking font whose designer got ripped off by his bosses.
Third image, a simplification, with just the hinges and the hieroglyphics, more abstract, with no comprehensible or relatable focal figure (or "hero" as teacher Alice Meyers-Wallace refers to it). This represents a rethinking -- naturally accompanied by self-doubt. Here's how I explained it on my Facebook page: "HINGES, HIEROGLYPHICS -- NO HERO The general pattern of my work is to have a complicated background, upon which I place a focus element -- a "hero" as one teacher called it. A foreground. The recognizable identifiable foreground figure was the viewer's comfortable anchor in each piece. In this one, after a couple failed attempts at a foreground (you can see the results on my website), I decided to eliminate the heroic foreground and be satisfied with the inherent interest of the abstract background."
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_yUoEAAAAMBAJ_2
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_xSgDAAAAMBAJ
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_yQkuAQAAIAAJ
September 15, 2016
A European Refugee from Religious War
 
An illustration from a Dutch account of the 17th century adventures of Francois Leguat, born into a Protestant (Huguenot) family in France. In 1689, he fled Catholic persecution to Holland, In 1690, he set out with nine companions in a small frigate to found a colony for co-religionists on the island of Reunion in the Indian Ocean. Many adventures and discoveries ensued; he documented several species that are now extinct, including a giant tortoise and a bird related to the Dodo bird. Leguat survived the maritime hazards, imprisonment, shore-side brawls, and various legal and political troubles. He finally returned to Europe, and died in London in his 90's. Again, my fervent hope is that the refugees from the complicated Sunni-Shiite sectarian conflict in the Middle East will find a way to prosper and contribute as Leguat (and the Puritans in America) survived flight from the complicated Catholic-Protestant sectarian conflicts in Europe.
The full title of the 1708 Dutch edition of Leguat's story is: De gevaarlyke en zeldzame reyzen van den heere François Leguat met zyn byhebbend gezelschap naar twee onbewoonde Oostindische eylanden. Gedaan zedert den jare 1690, tot 1698 toe. Behelzende een naukeurig verhaal van hunne scheepstocht; hun tweejaarig verblijf op het eylandt Rodrigue, en hoe wonderlyk zy daar af gekomen zijn: als meede, de wreede mishandelingen door den gouverneur van Mauritius; hun driejaarig bannissement op een rots in zee; en hoe zy door ordre der Compagnie t'Amsterdam, buyten verwagting, daar afgehaald en naar Batavia gevoerd wierden (Link1: Google Translate "The gevaarlyke and rare reyzen of the lord François Leguat with ZYN byhebbend company to two uninhabited Indian Eylanden . zedert done the jare 1690, up to 1698 . Law claiming a naukeurig story of their ship's journey ; tweejaarig their stay at Eylandt Rodrigue and how wonderlyk she be there come off if mead, the cruel abuses by the Governor of Mauritius; their driejaarig bannissement on a rock in the sea ; and how she ordre by the Company t'Amsterdam , buyten verwagting since picked up and fed mounds to Batavia").
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gevaarlykeenzel00legu
September 9, 2016
Some Variations on Stencil Designs
     
   
Was excited to run across a catalog of stencils, Stencils for 1937 created by Stencil Specialty Co,. Inc. (Link1) and am experimenting with those designs.
On the far left, a set of stencils for a nursery or children's bedroom, set against a large rock containing nummulite fossils, from the 1868 The ocean world : being a descriptive history of the sea and its living inhabitants (Link2). The rock is placed upon a background of a stained glass pattern found in Salisbury Cathedral, from the 1880 Suggestions in design : being a comprehensive series of original sketches in various styles of ornament : arranged for application in the decorative and constructive arts (Link3).
Next, against a background composed of a repetitive pattern from the stencil book, barely visible, is an illustration of a bearded man hypnotizing a woman from the 1847 L'art de magnétiser; ou, Le magnetisme animal considéré sous le point de vue théorique, pratique et thérapeutique (Link4; Google Translate: "The art of magnetizing ; or the animal magnetism considered from the theoretical point of view, practical and therapeutic"). The couple is placed upon a metal shield from the 1894 Album hervorragender Gegenstände aus der Waffensammlung des allerhöchsten Kaiserhauses (Link5: Google Translate: "Album outstanding items from the collection of weapons of the highest imperial family").
Third in line, a variation on a single stencil pattern.
Next row, a stencil pattern forms the background and a stencil figure of a boy blowing bubbles. The bubble-blowing boy is superimposed on a monstrous sea creature from Link2. To the right, an illustration of a torch-lit funeral ceremony from the 1682 Des decorations funebres : ou il est amplement traité des tentures, des lumieres, des mausolées, catafalques, inscriptions & autres ornemens funebres; avec tout ce qui s'est fait de plus considerable depuis plus d'un siecle, pour les papes, empereurs, rois, reines, cardinaux, princes, prelats, sçavans & personnes illustres en naissance, vertu & dignité (Link6; Google Translate: "Of funeral decorations : either he is amply treated drapes, lights , mausoleums , catafalques , registration & other ornaments funeral with all that has been more considerable for over a century , to the popes , emperors , kings, queens , cardinals, princes , prelates , sçavans & famous people born under & dignity").
Next image is a composition of stencil babies playing at war with toy swords and a broomstick horse, with a tinted stencil border. Meanwhile, ominously, above them, flipped upside down, a grisly scene of a 13th century crusaders marching past casualties in a ditch in Stedingen. The Stedingen Crusade was waged against European peasants who did not defer to the Pope. The image is from a 1936 German almanac, Ludendorffs Verlag - Tannenberg-Jahrweiser 1936 (Link6; Google Translate: "Ludendorff Publisher, Tannanberg Year-Wise 1936"). The grisly image is overlaid on a church's vaulted ceiling from the 1897 Czech Soupis památek historických a uměleckých v Královstvi českém od pravěku do polovice XIX. stoleti (Link7; Google Translate: "Inventory of historical monuments and art in the Czech kingdom from prehistory to the mid XIX century")
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/StencilSpecialtyCo
Link2 archive.org/details/oceanworld00figu
Link3 archive.org/details/suggestionsindes00leig
Link4 archive.org/details/bub_gb_z0xhAAAAIAAJ
Link5 archive.org/details/albumhervorragen02kunsbr> Link5 archive.org/details/gri_33125008736338
Link6 archive.org/details/LudendorffsVerlagTannenbergJahrweiser1936um1935134S.ScanTextFraktur
Link7 archive.org/details/bub_gb_xH0EAAAAYAAJ
September 10, 2016
The Four Elements of Human Physiology
 
The Four "Humors" of ancient (and inaccurate) medical science, from an 1850 collection of prints, Die fliegenden Blätter des XVI. und XVII. Jahrhunderts, in sogenannten Einblatt-Drucken, mit Kupferstichen und Holzschnitten (Link1; Google Translate: "The flying leaves of the XVI . and XVII . Century , in the so-called single-sheet printing, with engravings and woodcuts"). The theory is discredited but it lives on in our language. Choleric means quick to anger, Sanguine means optimistic or hopeful, Melancholic means depressed, Phlegmatic means "an unemotional and stolidly calm disposition" -- although I don't know how that fits with the vomiting man in the illustration.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_xGQ5AAAAMAAJ
September 9, 2016
Monthly Headings, Color Samples, Rosary Hour
   
I was drawn to the headings for monthly listings from a 1936 German almanac, Ludendorffs Verlag - Tannenberg-Jahrweiser 1936 (Link1; Google Translate: "Ludendorff Publisher, Tannanberg Year-Wise 1936") and assembled those headings into the left-hand image. The headings are combined with color samples from the 1896 A grammar of colouring : applied to decorative painting and the arts (Link2). However, when I examined the finished image, I saw that in assembling the headings, I duplicated two -- and missed two. So the next day, I found the two monthly headings I missed and used them to make the right hand image, in a composition with a painting (La Hora del Rosario; Google Translate: "The Rosary Hour") from a 1919 issue of the Cuban magazine Arquitectura (Link3). I like the nun on the far left -- who has a piercing look.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/LudendorffsVerlagTannenbergJahrweiser1936um1935134S.ScanTextFraktur
Link2 archive.org/details/gri_33125014501866
Link3 archive.org/details/ArquitecturaAnoIINr10Abril1919
September 8, 2016
Medieval Balkan Tombstones
 
During the 1960's, art historian Marian Wenzel traveled through the Balkans, documenting carvings on the tombstones of the area. She published her work in the 1965 Ukrasni Motivi na Stecima: Ornamental Motifs on Tombstones from Medieval Bosnia (Link1). This image combines two views from this book. In the background are carvings showing a biological motif, especially trees; in the foreground are two larger tombstones that combine a cross with a crescent -- signifying perhaps the combination of Christian and Islamic influences in the region.
One of the conclusions of Wenzel's research was to downplay the influence of the beliefs of Bogomilism on the Bosnian people. Bogomilism was declared a "heresy" by the established Roman Catholic Church and various Popes authorized crusades against adherents.
The Church's persecution of heretical beliefs was the narrative center of the popular The Da Vinci Code movie. In 2006, a Macedonian team of movie makers released a similar movie, Tajnata Kniga (The Secret Book), following religious mysteries through a war-torn Yugoslavia. I watched it on YouTube and enjoyed it. Watch it here, with dialogue in French with English subtitles. Read a critic's discussion of the two films here.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/MarianWencelUKRASNIMOTIVINASTECIMA
September 6, 2016
Lighting, Luck, Old Stuff
 
A composition of four images placed upon the blurred background of a diagram for a card trick from a 2013 Spanish-language magazine of magic, El Manuscrito 25 (Link1); note the Ace of Spades in the top left and bottom right corners. The first imposed image, far left, is a photo from a June 1933 issue of The American Cinematographer (Link2). The photo is meant to illustrate lighting techniques for indoor studio work; the subject is not identified. Note the backlit hair, the expressive hands, her bemused expression.
Next to her is what seems to be a crowded table in a museum displaying Roman treasures of carved stone, silver, clay, and bronze, from the 1886 Die österreichisch-ungarische Monarchie in Wort und Bild (Link3; Google Translate: "The Austro-Hungarian Monarchy in Words and Picture"). There is a Latin inscription on the table that I can''t translate, something about somebody's grandfather fulfilling a vow to an emperor.
Inset above and below that picture are two ornate iron window grates from Meersburg, shown in the 1887 Die Kunstdenkmäler des Grossherzogthums Baden (Link4; Google Translate: The monuments of the Grand Duchy of Baden ).
Happy Labor Day, everybody. Union membership has declined drastically in the United States; labor unions represented 20% of workers in 1973, only 7% in 2013. Decline is linked to economic inequality, lousy job market, phony "Free Market" rhetoric from Ayn Rand libertarians.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/ElManuscrito25
Link2 archive.org/details/americancinematographer13-1933-06
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_xFzd9b7wlKYC
Link4 archive.org/details/bub_gb_x5AZAAAAYAAJ
September 5, 2016
Islamic Holy Site
 
Two images combined from a Saudi Arabian government English-language pamphlet Hajj and Umrah Guide (Link1), written for travelers to the holy city of Mecca on either the Hajj (the mandatory pilgrimage on a specified date, Sept. 9-14 this year), or the Umrah (the non-mandatory pilgrimage without a set time). Prominent in the circular inset in the image is the Kaaba, the black, cubic temple at the center of the site. It turns out that the Kaaba was a holy site long before Muhammad (570-632) declared it so; there are Greek sources who mention it seven centuries before. It is an interesting dynamic to watch the interplay between radical Islamic ISIS and the Saudi caretakers of Mecca. Isis in the past has destroyed ancient religious sites and in there are unsubstantiated reports that an ISIS leader had threatened to "kill those who worship stones" at the Kaaba. Only 42-feet square, the temple is an easy target; hold on to your hats if anyone hits it, whether it is a genuine act or a false flag provocation!
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/cea7d951c94620603c292e9feaa76928
September 4, 2016
Movie-making Magic
 
Looking at 1933 issues of the magazine The American Cinematographer, we see some early developments in movie-making technology. On the left side of the picture, from a June issue (Link1), a photo of an Edison-Mazda movie light, headlined "When 1/5000ths of a drop is a FLOOD", touting the company's ability to eliminate water vapor from inside the bulb. The horizontal picture in the bottom of the image illustrates an article in the May issue (Link2) by cinematographer George Folsey as an example of good lighting practice. It is a still from the 1933 movie Reunion in Vienna. Folsey says the set is light-toned, which offered many challenges. Note how both the woman, the mirror next to her, and the man are clearly-lit; the wall behind her is shadowed, and the next room's details are visible. Publisher American Society of Cinematographers is still around. The background is a pattern from Die Kunstdenkmäler des Grossherzogthums Baden (Link3; Google Translate: "The monuments of the Grand Duchy of Baden".)
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/americancinematographer13-1933-06
Link2 archive.org/details/americancinematographer13-1933-05
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_x5AZAAAAYAAJ
September 3, 2016
Bathroom Cabinet Mirrors
 
A collage of images of four bathroom "medicine cabinets" with mirrors from the 1938 catalog of National Cabinets with Character (Link1). I have always been fascinated with catalog pictures of mirrors, with each artist's abstract improvisation of the scene reflected in the mirror -- a scene that doesn't really exist but must seem to be real. I also like the frequent use of young women peering at their reflections in a mirror, as we see in the girl adjusting her bobbed hair in the lower left corner -- dimly repeated in the lower right, mirrored, of course.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/Sweets1938Sec2728NationalMetalProductsCo
September 3, 2016
Swirling Vision of Old-time Gems
 
A highly-distorted display of sixteen tiny gems and rings from the 2000 Ancient Gems And Finger Rings (Link1), a catalog from California's Getty Museum.
The automobile route to visit Janice's family in Southern New Jersey took us past the delightful store Gary's Gem Garden (slogan: "We Deal in Nature"), and we often stopped there. My knowledge of this subject is almost entirely derived from those visits. I think "precious" gems (e.g., diamonds, sapphires, rubies and emeralds) are ridiculously over-priced in comparison to equally beautiful "semi-precious stones" (e.g., amethyst, turquoise, malachite, etc.) See this discussion of the difference, which implies that the price difference is purely a sucker ploy by precious-gem marketers. If it's time to get a present for Janice, I get a semi-precious stone, although I have been known to buy (for myself) shell jewelry, once used by paleolithic people as currency, or finely-polished fossils, such as the trilobite that is currently my artistic emblem/insignia or the more common ammonite.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/AncientGemsAndFingerRings
September 1, 2016
Just Dont Fall, Friends
 
From time to time, I make an image with a recurring theme -- almost a prayer -- for those I love. JUST DONT FALL. As we age -- and I just turned the corner on threescore and ten -- we can adapt to and survive just about anything. But a bad fall can cause such a severe decline in mobility, independence, and quality of life that -- well, as my mother once said to me, if the discomforts and limitations of age suddenly appeared in your body one day back when you were twenty, you'd kill yourself. Fall the wrong way and you get a broken hip! See this warning from the government's Center for Disease Control. Anyway, what brings this to mind is that I broke my commandment and fell today. Crossing 21st Street at Walnut, some tiny bump in the street caught on my newly purchased walking shoes, and over I went, head-first, clutching a 6.5-pound backpack and two take-out lunches. Landed on my palms and knees. Saved the lunches. "Are you okay," kindly passers-by asked. Ended up with two scraped knees, minor damage. But a reminder: JUST DONT FALL. This means you.
The illustration is from the 1710 Perspectiva practica, oder, Vollständige Anleitung zu der Perspectiv (Link1; Google Translate: "Perspectiva practica, or Complete guide to the Perspectiv"), showing a circular staircase.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125009324712
August 31, 2016
Factory Girls, Knee Pain Relief, Symbols
 
On the left, an illustration from the 1938 Canadian social studies text The Wonderland of Common Things (Link1), showing Canadian "factory girls" at work assembling rubber shoes. In the diamond to the right of that image, an advertisement for a patent medicine, captioned "A young married woman relieved of painful knee joints by Dr. Hamilton's Pills." The ad appears in the 1934 Recipes for everyday use in the home (Link2). Behind the relieved patient, some symbols from the undated Germanische Und Baltische Religion (Link3),
As a final step in the last two images (Woman Fainting and Canadian Factory Girls), I flipped the image horizontally, from right to left. I found the effect disorienting, confusing, unexpected.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/wonderlandofcomm00jone
Link2 archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-osler_everyday-use_catarrhozonerecipes1934-16069
Link3 archive.org/details/StromBiezaisGermanischeUndBaltischeReligion
August 30, 2016
Woman Fainting in Seance and Masonry Workers
 
An illustration of a story appearing in the April 1934 issue of the Cuban magazine, Carteles (Link1). The story was titled "Mas sensacional del siglo" (Google Translate: "More sensational century"); it seems to show a well-dressed woman in a throne-like chair, fainting as men on either side clasp her arms. In the background and above her are an illustration of workmen breaking down a brick wall, from a 1938 trade catalog, Masterwalls by Hauserman (Link2).
This is one of those images that I consider "dream images:" detailed, realistic scenes that (hopefully) engage a viewer's interest but do not provide a simple, rational explanatio
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/CartelesVolXXNr131934
Link2 archive.org/details/Sweets1938Sec202MasterwallsByHauserman
August 29, 2016
Passionate Kiss with Parrot, Winged Assyrian Deity, and Anatomical Samples
 
The background combines two images of mysterious biological specimens, seen under a microscope, from the 1888 Lehrbuch der praktischen vergleichenden Anatomie (Link1; Google Translate: "Textbook of practical comparative anatomy").
At top, is a passionate kiss from an illustration in a 1934 issue of the Cuban Carteles magazine (Link2). It is from a story titled "Uno cuento del ambiente de los puertos de sur", Google Translation: "One tale atmosphere of the southern ports." Atmosphere indeed!
At bottom, pasted over a circular biological sample, is a winged Assyrian deity (sometimes called "genie") from the 1889 Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature. Those two-millenia-old gods must be angry at the current carnage wrought by high technology and geopolitical maneuvering-by-proxy in that country (Link3).
This is one of those personal, therapeutic pieces that expresses various things weighing on my mind: namely, religion, sex, war, and physiology.

Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_wxlRu5XIyy8C
Link2 archive.org/details/CartelesVolXXNr131934
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_ws5hOxs5feIC
August 27, 2016
Italian Futurist Wreathed Siren on Glass
 
The wreath with naked woman is from Italian Futurist Gabriele d'Annunzio's 1905 Laudi del cielo, del mare, della terra e degli eroi (Link1; Google translate: "Praises of the sky, the sea, the earth and the heroes"). It is placced on a matrix of glass samples from the 1938 trade catalog Libbey Owens Ford glass (Link2).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125009319373
Link1 archive.org/details/Sweets1938Sec182LibbeyOwensFordGlass
August 26, 2016
Caribbean Vision of European Royalty
   
From the April 1934 edition of the Cuban magazine Carteles (Link1), a cover illustration of a simpering, guillotine-ready pair of aristocrats at flirtatious but languid play.
Big day today. Part of one of my images was used in a Plastic Club poster, see image on right.
Day started out with broken phone and computer. Somehow fixed phone and bought from my local computer guy a refurbished gamer's laptop (Dell XPS) for $300, new one goes for $1900. Many errands done and some responsibilities passed on to others.
But worrisome call from cardiologist, asking me to go back for a re-test, adds a dark note. End the day by rushing to install programs on new computer to do this posting. Didn't put too much energy into the artistry of the image. Distracted by the health news, I was determinedly cheerful but inattentive to -- almost hiding the bad news from -- Janice.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/CartelesVolXXNr121934
August 26, 2016
Trilobite Triplets and Medieval Weapons
 
In the background, a combination of marble samples from the 1906 Nouveau Larousse illustré : dictionnaire universel encycloedique (Link1) and an alphabet from the 1909 The private press : a study in idealism : to which is added a bibliography of the Essex House Press (Link2).
At top, a combination of two pictures from the 1838 The magazine of natural history (Link3). One image shows a large rock with fossilized plants. On top of that are three instances of my signature fossil Trilobite.
At bottom, two 15th century infantrymen practice with deadly pole-axes (sometimes called pollaxes) from an undated reissue of Medieval combat - A Fifteenth-century illustrated manual (Link4), originally written by German fencing master Hans Talhoffer. Talhoffer also produces manuals of dagger techniques. Bloody business, I say. I think of the Walter Kittredge poem, "Many are the hearts that are weary tonight, wishing for the war to cease," and think sadly of the people affected by the nearly six-year-old Syrian Civil War.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/nouveaularoussei00laro
Link2 archive.org/details/gri_33125014447912
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_wmFIAAAAMAAJ
Link4 archive.org/details/MedievalCombatAFifteenthCenturyIllustratedManualSwordFightingAndCloseQuarterCombatByHansTalhoffer
August 23, 2016
Female Tyranny of Chores
 
Woke up this morning to this card from Janice, my wife (under Pennsylvania Quaker law) for six years and girlfriend/roommate for 25 years before that. One of my jokes with her is saying "You'd be the perfect girlfriend -- if only you had a personality." Personality she got -- and moods and facial expressions and different voices. (Yes, she has a Donald Trump imitation.) She is a trip.
But here, her complaint is common to many women. I get up in the morning and go straight to doing my art work, or whatever. It's a male privilege that I feel entitled to single-minded obsession. She feels constrained by various household tasks and social obligations. It's not fair -- but when she complains, I say "I'm not telling you to do those things." The insistence on those chores come from inside her -- perhaps channeling her maternal grandmother, a farm widow raising four children, for whom chores were survival.
August 22, 2016
Water Bug and Girl in a Chemise
 
The painting of a girl in the lower right is from a 2015 issue of RevolutionArt magazine (Link1). It is by contemporary French artist Eric Fiorin., who explains it as an interpretation of the Picasso 1905 painting Girl in a Chemise. I have emailed Fiorin letting him know I used his image and giving him the link. He responded: "Fine! Thanks!"
The image of a bug at top is an illustration from a children's book Water (Link2), part of a line of learning books called the Ladybird Books. It illustrates how surface tension works: "Water has a kind of 'skin.' This insect can walk on water." It brings to my mind childhood memories, rowing down to Ontario's Duck Creek where I saw "water bugs" skittering about among the water lilies and frogs.
In the background is a chart of white lines of force from the 1874 Die lehre vom galvanismus und elektromagnetismus (Link3; Google translate: "The doctrine of galvanism and electromagnetism").
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/revolutionart_issue_50
Link2 archive.org/details/Water-English-LadybirdSeries
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_RP04AAAAMAAJ
August 21, 2016
Killing the Birds of Paradise
 
From the 1869 The Malay Archipelago: the land of the orang-utan, and the bird of paradise (Link1) by Alfred Russel Wallace, an engraving showing two hunters perched in tree branches preparing to shoot beautiful Birds of Paradise with bows and arrows, while another hunter on the ground picks up fallen birds. The birds' feathers were popular in Indonesia and Europe for decoration. Author Alfred Russel Wallace did not have family money like his contemporary Charles Darwin, and made money by selling collected specimens (like Michael Douglas in the 1984 movie Romancing the Stone).
The image is framed in a decorative page border from a handsomely printed 1910 edition of The Pilgrim's Progress From This World to That Which is to Come (Link2), the Puritan allegory first published in 1638. Its severe ideology reminds me of the bloody Catholic v. Protestant civil war in England, so similar to the Shiite v. Sunni conflicts of today's Middle East -- but four centuries in the past. The diaspora of refugees from European intolerance (my wife's forebears among them) led to the founding of New World settlements and culture. Let us hope that the refugees from Middle Eastern war and intolerance can find a place where they can contribute and prosper.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/malayarchipelago00wall
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_r7GqDgtnJ5MC
August 21, 2016
b>Papuan Charm
 
From the 1869 The Malay Archipelago: the land of the orang-utan, and the bird of paradise (Link1) by Alfred Russel Wallace, an engraving of a charm from Papua, New Guinea. Such charms sre sometimes called Tikis. The geometric simplicity of this type of figure in Polynesian Art and African Art influenced many European modern artists.
Author Wallace was part of a grand gesture of scientific collegiality in 19th century England, when Charles Darwin shared credit with Wallace for the discovery of the theory of Natural Selection. Darwin discovered it first chronologically, but included Wallace in a joint publication and saw that in later life, the impoverished Wallace received a small pension.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/malayarchipelago00wall
August 20, 2016
Chinese Thing-a-ma-jig against Film Frames
 
Two images combined here. One (in the center) is s hand-rubbing of an oddly-shaped implement from an 1800 collection of Japanese antiquities, Shūko jisshu (Link1). That object, irregularly shaped with a hole in the middle, is placed upon a rectangular sample of an early 70-millimeter film format from s February 1930 issue of the trade magazine American Cinematographer (Link2). The caption says the scene on the film is from the 1930 film Happy Days: it seems to show members of a minstrel show. The discussion of the new 70-mm film format is interesting; it says that larger movie theatres are not getting the required resolution from 35-mm film and discusses preferences for image proportion -- a discussion that continues today. That particular format (brand-name Grandeur) did not catch on; only one serious feature film was produced, The Big Trail in 1930, with John Wayne in his first leading role.

What am I trying to do here? Here's a theory. The eye and brain desire a certain density of detail. The optimum level of detail may be different for different people. Personally, what I like is detail that largely fills the image rectangle, buteoffers different interpretations at different resolutions. Meanwhile, in the same way, the bibliographic and historic background of these pieces adds to the density of detail. Given the visual and factual detail, each work is like a worm-hole to another visual and factual universe. I'm not sure my view is shared in the art world.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125008523520
Link2 archive.org/details/americancinematographer10-1930-02
August 17, 2016
Weird Critters Against Prison and Reichstag Ruin
 
From the 1873 Animal locomotion or walking, swimming, and flying (Link1), two odd flying critters: on the left, a Red-Throated Dragon; on the right, a Flying Lemur. The animals are plaed on a central panel, which shows the bars of a jail cell (#5) from the 1938 Sweet's Catalog File (Link2) and a gold-leaf ceiling decoration from a Hollywood movie theatre, from the same catalog. On the right-most panel, a tier of jail cells from the Sweet's catalog. On the left-most panel, a 1933 photo of the burnt-out Sessions Chamber from a 1963 book about the evidence that the Nazis started the Reichstag Fire (Link3).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_lNM3AAAAMAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/Sweets1938Sections1725Combined1228Pages
Link3 archive.org/details/ReichstagFire
August 16, 2016
Metamorphosis II: Diagrams from Art Education Book
 
Another try for an entry to the show at the Plastic Club with the theme of Metamorphosis. It's basically composed of three figures from a 1904 series of Canadian Text books of art education (Link1). At top and bottom, from Book Five, are mirror images of the four steps involved in drawing a boy in a cap with an umbrella. The text explains: "When the foundation of a house is ready and the carpenters begin to build, they first erect a framework, for the beam and rafters must be there before they can put on the siding, roofing, and finishing. An artist works in much the same way when sketching the pose. He calls his beams and rafters lines of direction." In the middle, from Book Six (Link2), is a diagram showing the creation of a decorative design based on a Rose Hip cutting. The text explains, "Sometimes we go to nature, not for the sake of representing just what we see, but to find suggestions for some arrangement of shapes, values, or colors that will result in beauty. [This] composition is not intended for a picture of rosehips and leaves. It is a sort of irregular pattern, resulting from the breaking of the oblong with the lines and areas suggested in this particular growth." In the background, is a chart from Book Five showing the tints and shades of the primary colors.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/textbooksofarted05froe_0
Link2 archive.org/details/textbooksofarted06froe
August 15, 2016
Lost Representation: Ironworkers and Bees
 
Sometimes the filtering steps I go through destroy the realism and make an image incomprehensible to the eye. I think this is one where I went too far. But I like the look.
Anyway, the source image in the top third is from the 1894 Canadian Text books of art education (Link1); it shows industrious bees buzzing around flowers, to illustrate a Shakespeare quote from Henry V: "So work the honey bees: creatures that by rule in nature teach the act of order to a peopled kingdom." The bees image is superimposed on a picture of iron workers climbing on an Italian cupola under construction, from the 1906 Milano e l'Esposizione internazionale del Sempione (Link2: Google Translate: "Milan and the International Exhibition of Sempione"). The workmen climbing high over the city reminded me of the bees.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/textbooksofarted05froe_0
Link2 archive.org/details/gri_33125012259038
August 14, 2016
Awkward Intimacy
 
From the November 1925 issue of McCall's Magazine (Link1), an image from an advertisement for orthopedic shoes. It shows a woman seated on a cushion talking with her husband. The story is that the woman's aching feet keep her from working to pay off the mortgage. "Are your feet more important than our home?" the husband asks in the headline. The couple gets her new "Arch Preserver" shoes that relieve her pain and allow the couple to pay off their mortgage. I was attracted to the image before I read the advertising copy. What's remarkable is her contorted and probably uncomfortable posture. Until I read the advertising copy, I thought the image was meant to show ordinary relaxed cuddling behavior between man and wife.
Underlying their image is a composition of a superimposed brick pattern and a display of mounted springs from the 1938 Sweet's Catalog File (Link2).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/McCallsV053N02192511
Link2 archive.org/details/Sweets1938Sections1725Combined1228Pages
August 13, 2016
Metamorphosis I: Bride and Ottoman Astrolabe on Bricks and Lace
 
The first show of the Fall at the Plastic Club (opening Sept. 11, delivery deadline Aug. 26) has the theme of Metamorphosis, defined as "transformation, transition, or profound change in the work’s subject matter or in the nature of its medium." Here's my first attempt at an entry. It shows a vertical transformation: at the top, the upper half of a pretty bride from the cover of a November, 1925 issue of McCall's Magazine (Link1), fading into a drawing of an astrolabe, a device for modeling the movement of the stars, from the 2007 The astrology of the Ottoman Empire (Link2). The metamorphosis fades down into the lower half of the same bride. The background is composed of a combination of lace from the 1906 Milano e l'Esposizione internazionale del Sempione (Link3: Google Translate: "Milan and the International Exhibition of Sempione") and some bricks from the 1938 Sweet's Catalog File, a collection of builder's catalogs (Link4).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/McCallsV053N02192511
Link2 archive.org/details/TheAstrologyOfTheOttomanEmpireByBarisIlhan
Link3 archive.org/details/gri_33125012259038
Link4 archive.org/details/Sweets1938Sections1725Combined1228Pages
August 13, 2016
Illustration from the Golden Age
 
There was a "Golden Age of Illustration" in American and European magazines, from about 1880 to 1925. Much of it happened here in Philadelphia, in Howard Pyle's Brandywine School. I missed the height of this Golden Age, but in the 1940's, I remember those large-format magazines with slick paper and painterly illustrations arriving in the mail or piled in a barbershop. The illustrations depicted intense moments of a story and gave form to the fictional characters. Sadly, both fiction and illustration have largely disappeared from today's printed magazines. Anyway, here, from the November, 1925 issue of McCall's Magazine (Link1) is an illustration by Harvey Dunn. The image illustrates a story called The Love of Cactus Carrie. The image seems to me to capture a suspenseful, dream-like moment in a smoky cantina atmosphere. Something is about to happen. We don't know what, but we sure want to find out.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/McCallsV053N02192511
August 12, 2016
Coureur de Bois, Dutch Games, and Color Sample
 
In the upper left, a picture of a Coureur des bois ("runner of the woods") from the 1905 The story of the Canadian people (Link1). In my hometown, the coureur de bois of colonial times were folk heroes. Bad-ass woodsmen and trappers who went off in the woods for months at a time, trapping furs and trading with Indians. This one carries a tomahawk and rifle, with a Bowie knife at his side. On his back, a pack of furs. Once, drinking at a bar on Detroit's Woodward Avenue, I met a descendant of one, a short, trim redhead whose family had lived in Detroit since the 1600's.
The woodsman image is placed on a background of pictures showing child play activities in Holland, from the 1897 Amsterdam in de zeventiende eeuw (Link2: Google Translate from the Dutch: "Amsterdam in the seventeenth century"). The overall composition is placed upon a pattern based on paint color samples from the 1938 Sweet's Catalog File (Link3).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/storyofcanadianp0000dunc
Link2 archive.org/details/gri_33125008338077
Link3 archive.org/details/Sweets1938Sections1725Combined1228Pages
August 11, 2016
Glass Samples and Bird Catching Fly
 
The background is a set of samples of patterned and wired glass for doorways and skylights, taken from the 1938 Sweet's Catalog File (Link1), a collection of builder's catalogs. The bird figure in the foreground is an engraving from the 1873 Animal locomotion or walking, swimming, and flying (Link2) showing a bird catching an insect in mid-air. (The caption of the picture is "In the clutch of the enemy.")
This is (deliberately) a more abstract, less relevant image, after the heavy stuff of the last two entries about murderous ISIS activities. Let me say I'm not sure I'm right in my previous discussion on the purpose of ISIS; it's my best, non-expert guess. I just hope that readers will be suspicious of a sudden ISIS outrage followed by a well-intentioned public outcry calling for massive American commitment of ground troops to the Middle East; if I'm right, it's what ISIS wants.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/Sweets1938Sections1725Combined1228Pages
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_lNM3AAAAMAAJ
August 10, 2016
ISIS Topples Christian Crucifixes
 
Two illustrations from the latest issue of the slick ISIS magazine Dabiq (Link1). The issue's feature story is "Breaking the Cross" and shows ISIS soldiers removing crosses from the roofs of Christian churches in the group's area of control, the so-called "Caliphate." The issue was originally posted on my favorite source website archive.org, but it was removed "due to issues with the item's content." (I complained to archive.org about the removal. Sure, the magazine's content is deadly toxic, but I want the site to be censorship-free.) Anyway, I found an alternative site at Link2, The Clarion Project, an Islamic watchdog site dedicated to "challenging extremism and promoting dialogue." (According to Wikipedia, the Southern Poverty Law Center described the organization as an anti-Muslim group.) The issue is dated 1437 Shawwal or August 2016 according to the Islamic calendar.

I don't understand ISIS. It is a relatively new group in the Middle East -- since 2014. In some ways, it seems to follow a deliberate strategy of provoking outrage, meant to encourage recruitment and to "draw the Crusaders into a quagmire of military conflict."
There are lots of examples of well-publicized ISIS outrages. Besides the intolerance exemplified in the toppling of Christian crosses (above) and the destruction of priceless artifacts (yesterday), there are also gruesome executions, the justification of sexual slavery of captured women as "spoils of war," and headline-producing but ineffective terrorist attacks in European and American cities. (More American are killed by falling furniture and TVs than are killed by terrorists.) All this is done with a fearsome, self-conscious grimace toward the camera. Unfortunately, I fear that both U.S. presidential candidates will be suckers for this "rope-a-dope" strategy.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/firefree18
Link2 www.clarionproject.org/factsheets-files/islamic-state-magazine-dabiq-fifteen-breaking-the-cross.pdf
August 9, 2016
2500-year-old Sculpture: Destroyed by ISIS?
 
In the center, a human-headed winged bull sculpture from Khorsabad in Iraq, once the capital of Assyrian King Sargon II (722–705 BC), depicted in a drawing taken from the 1872 Histoire ancienne de l'Orient (Link1). I did this interpretation before I saw this very same sculpture pictured in an article today about Islamic radical group ISIS' destruction of historic sites in Iraq -- perhaps including this one. Europeans did the same thing centuries ago -- see Iconoclasm. For Islamic Iconoclasm, see Aniconism in Islam.
The bull is superimposed on a design composed of ancient coins from the 1831 Voyage dans la Macédoine : contenant des recherches sur l'histoire, la géographie et les antiquités de ce pays (Link2)
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_JU5AAQAAIAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_JhIwAAAAYAAJ
August 8, 2016
Marie Antoinette at the Bastille
 
Two scenes from Thomas Carlyle's 1904 history The French Revolution: A History (Link1). In the background, the storming of the Bastille, and in the foreground a portrait of Queen Marie Antoinette. Perhaps it's the cosmetic fashions of those times or perhaps it's the courtly portrait style, but Marie Antoinette has always seemed remarkably unlovable to me -- almost inhuman.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_HoPRAAAAMAAJ
August 7, 2016
Cartoonist's View of Global Politics
 
The global politics of World War I as portrayed by a cartoonist's pen: here ia a cover from the May 1919 issue (Link1) of the Cuban arts magazine Social. It shows cartoon-stereotype nations comforting cartoon-Belgium (little girl in helmet, bandage and crutch) after the Kaiser's World War I invasion of Belgium and the associated atrocities against civilians. Not sure I can identify all the nations. The top row, from left, are Mexico, Spain, U.S. and China. Beefy gentlemen in the center is the United Kingdom. The little girl flaring her blue and white skirt is cartoon-France. I don't know what nations are represented by two cartoon-figures in the middle outer edges: (1) on the left, the saluting soldier in black and (2) on the right, the monocled and goateed diplomat holding a top hat. This cover was done by Conrado Massaguer, one of the founders of Social. See also this book on Massaguer.
This image brings a temporary end to the series of compositions inspired by the Cuban magazine Social. The reason I'm going back to my usual omnivorous consumption of international public domain sources is because I miss it. I may return to the survey of Social at some time in the future, or I may begin an issue-by-issue study of Harper's magazine.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SocialVolIVNo5Mayo1919
August 7, 2016
Child Extolls Value of Cleanliness
 
From an advertisement in the June 1920 issue of the Cuban magazine Social, a child clutches a box of Reuters Soap, still sold today. In place of the labeling on the box, there is a cartoon of a woman reclining on pillows smoking. Behind the child's figure, a blurry painting showing "The Gold Rush."
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SocialVolVNo6Junio1920
August 6, 2016
San Francisco de Assis
 
From the December 1924 issue of the Cuban magazine Social, a painting of St. Francis of Assisi by Mexican artist Garcia Cabral. The subject and the artist's treatment are so devout that I present a respectful treatment of the black-and-white original.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SocialVolIXNo12Diciembre1924
August 6, 2016
Chorus Lines, Clown Painter, Soap-sniffing Lady
 
From the December 1917 issue of the Cuban magazine Social, a composition of three images: (1) three rows of young women dressed up for cotillions or chorus lines, (2) an advertising image of a woman at bath-time admiring a bar of soap, and (3) in an ad for an advertising agency, a cryptic image of a clown holding a brush and paste bucket after pasting posters on a grimacing moon.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SocialVolIINo12Diciembre1917
August 6, 2016
Havana New Year's Party, 1931, with Dancer
 
From the January 1931 issue of the Cuban magazine Social (Link1, an announcement of a holiday party by a union of graphic artists. From the same issue, at the bottom, the dancer Raquel Weller, in a performance described as "divine."
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SocialVolXVINo1Enero1931
August 5, 2016
Cuban Mannequin, Male Nude, Wine Filter
 
Still interested in the Cuban magazine discussed below. Here, a drawing by Martha Lopez of a woman's head from the December 1926 issue of Social (Link1). In the background, is a picture of two naked black men reclining from the September 1931 issue of the same magazine (Link2). At bottom, is a drawing of a filter from the 1907 Die kellerbehandlung der traubenweine (Link3; Google Translate: "The cellar treatment of grape wines").

Finally found a listing of uploaded Social magazines. They're all uploaded by someone named mikasa. See it here
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SocialVolXINo12Diciembre1926
Link2 archive.org/details/SocialVolXVINo9Septiembre1931
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_qZs5AQAAIAAJ
August 4, 2016
Cuban Cover Girl, Orozco Mural for High School
 
Again, from that Cuban arts/fashion magazine Social (Link1), two combined images from the October 1926 issue. The young woman with the bobbed hair is the cover image. In the background, behind her, from the same issue, fragments of a fresco by Jose Clemente Orozco for a Mexico City high school.

This full bibliographic note marks some recovery from the Attention Overload dysfunction of the past days.
Two ideas percolating in Bewhiskered Bob's brain during this period:
  1. Mozart/Salieri: The Top 10% Problem: Consider a body of people ranked in order numerically by some skill, say, for example ballet, guitar, art, furniture-making. I find it next to impossible to distinguish among the top 10%. For instance, between the performer ranked at the top of the 10% and the performer ranked at the bottom of the 10%. Not sure where to go with this.
  2. Have been feeling restless lately. Also, nervous about the possibility of a con man like Trump being elected as president. Motivated by my enjoyment of the magazine Social and the Cuban Art Deco design therein, I've been thinking creating a separate web page on the subjct: such a project could include a trip to Miami Beach to take photographs of the Art Deco-inspired buildings and to look at collections of other Cuban magazines (such Carteles, Bohemia and Vanidades). And then (especially if Trump wins) a trip to recently unblockaded Cuba to research that neglected period of artistic activity in Cuba.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SocialVolXINo10Octubre1926
August 2, 2016
Cuban Dancer, Snowflakes, Frieze
 
I continue to be fascinated by the faded island glamour of the pre-Castro Cuban magazine Social. Here, from the June 1931 issue of the magazine (Link1) is dancer/choreographer Helen Tamiris, a socially-conscious modern dancer from New York. Note the modernism of the graphic image: the background "cubist rays" which continue out on the right of the image as typographic lines. She is advertising a 1931 show of dances set to Gershwin music. Tamiris married another dancer, Daniel Nagrin, and they started a dance company together. Other elements of the image: the dark spaces of the picture are overlaid with snowflake diagrams from the the 1886 Les glaciers et les transformations de l'eau (Link2: Google Translate "Glaciers and Water Transformations"). And finally, the border image is a frieze from the Parthenon showing Greeks and Persians at war, from the 1868 Greece : pictorial, descriptive, and historical (Link3).

Went through training yesterday to be a "Bernie's Peacekeeper" at the protests in Philadelphia this week. The Peacekeeper job basically involves isolating agent provocateurs and property-damaging ultra-leftists, telling folks which port-a-johns are least disgusting, and looking after the health and mood of the crowd. Most protests will involve a 3.5 mile walk (from City Hall to FDR Park in South Philly) in 95-degree heat. Luckily, there's a subway line that runs along that route and allows old men like myself to cheat. Why are there protests? Because of the feeling of many -- documented by recently released emails -- that the establishment (especially the Democratic National Committee) rigged the process to ensure a Clinton victory. Why am I getting involved? Because I think the enthusiasm of so many for the Vermont socialist geezer has the potential to make a long-term movement that will continue after the November election, even after Sanders departs the scene -- an alternative to the stale choices the current rigged system offers.

Those familiar with my work habits know that sometimes I go through periods when I fall behind on the bibliographic details of my work. This is generally a sign of what I call "overload depression," when I have so much on my to-do-list that I despair of catching up. This particular episode of work without citation is made worse because I had Internet connectivity problems on my regular laptop and had to switch to my backup laptop, plus three rather uneventful days as a "Bernie's Peacekeeper." The fact that I was able to upload this image on 7/31/2016, seven days after the funk began, is a sign that I'm beginning to find my way out of it.
Balloon, Mural, Cityscape
 
Europa, Photo and Muses
 
Distortion of Crane Alphabet
 
Altar Screen, Mirror, Louise Huff
 
French Actress in Factory Construction Scene
 
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SocialVolXVINo6Junio1931
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_APFZAAAAYAAJ
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_DFcMAAAAYAAJ
July 24-August 1, 2016
Cuban Magazine: Model, Dancer, Ancient Script
 
I have been exploring recently-uploaded issues of the Cuban arts magazine Social, published in Havana between 1916 and 1938 -- a link to a vanished cosmopolitan society, a Caribbean outpost of European art and fashion that lasted, until, first, the American mob arrived in the 1940's and, then, leftist guerillas overthrew the government in 1959. Here is a composition with two images from the November 1931 issue of Social (Link1). The dark-eyed face wrapped in a white turban is from an ad for Elizabeth Arden for "New Evening Dresses." Off to the left is ballerina Constancia Evans in a pose from a New York dance review. The writing on the right is from a different source. It is a sample of Cuneiform text (an interlinear translation into European sounds) from the 1871 Sprache und Sprachen Assyriens (Link2). Cuneiform was used in the Assyrian Empire, which occupied Syria, Iraq and Turkey from 2500 B.C. to 600 B.C.
It occurs to me that it would be nice to visit Cuba someday to produce a series of prints based on the gold mine of material in the issues of Social.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SocialVolXVINo11Noviembre1931
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_eks7AAAAYAAJ
July 21, 2016
Wood Engraving Alphabet of Death
 
From the 1861 A treatise on wood engraving, historical and practical, Hans Holbein's "alphabet of death" from 1530, showing skeletons using various techniques of violence to subdue the foolish living. My interpretation catches the contortions and tensions of Holbein's image and adds color -- but misses the marvelous detail.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SocialVolXINo10Octubre1926
August 3, 2016
Antique Bracelet, Cactus, Glacuers
 
In the lower foreground, a metal bracelet depicting winged dogs from the 1857 The Egyptians in the time of the Pharaohs. Being a companion to the Crystal Palace Egyptian collections (Link1). Above and behind the bracelet, a plant form (I figure it is a cactus, but I can't read the German Fraktur alphabet) from the 1905 Die Pflanze; ihr Bau und ihr Leben (Link2: Google Translate: "The Plants: Their Construction and Their Lives"). Finally, behind all that, a topographical map of a glacier sitting among hills from the 1886 Les glaciers et les transformations de l'eau (Link3: Google Translate "Glaciers and Water Transformations").
Coloring is much more subtle in this one, because my usual colorizing utility, Dreamscope was not working right and I had to use GIMP's Fractalize filter to add color. Turns out Dreamscope was being revised, adding new filters. Below is the same image using my traditional colorizing method.
 
Sources:
Link1archive.org/details/bub_gb_b2EZAAAAYAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_piozAQAAMAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_APFZAAAAYAAJ
July 22, 2016
Mater Dolorosa & Shop Window
 
On the left, from the 1867 Legends of the Madonna as represented in the fine arts : forming the third series of Sacred and legendary art, (Link1) a woodcut of the Mater Dolorosa, which shows Mary, the mother of Jesus, pierced through her heart by seven arrows, representing her "Seven Sorrows" -- seven distinct painful episodes in her life, including her family's flight as refugees from Herod's Massacre of the Innocents and removal of her son's crucified body from the cross.
(We all have sorrowful episodes in our lives. Imagine if your seven worst wounds were enumerated and recited twenty centuries after you died! I shudder to even contemplate compiling such a list for my unexamined life. For the sake of everyday contentment, regrets from my past are deeply repressed -- all but erased from the memory banks.)
The Mater Dolorosa woodcut is placed upon an oval mirror from the 1910 catalog of frame manufacturer Frank W. Williams Company: wholesale catalog and price list no. 26 (Link2). All this is then placed upon a sample display from the 1924 trade catalog A year of hardware windows (Link3), which shows store window displays suggested for hardware stores. The display shown is for July, emphasizing Chinaware and Pottery.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006004994
Link2 archive.org/details/FrankW.WilliamsCompany
Link3 archive.org/details/WisconsinRetailHardwareAssociation
July 21, 2016

Russian Symbolist's Obsession with Demon Poem
 
Four images from the 1911 art book Mikhail Aleksandrovich Vrubelʹ; zhiznʹ i tvorchestvo (Link1). Mikhail Vrubel is a painter difficult to classify. Some consider him a symbolist, some consider him a throwback to earlier times. I can't read the book text because of the Cyrillic alphabet. At left is some sort of vegetative "Green Man". The two horizontal images are from his "Demon Prostrate" series -- recurring images of a demon buried in the ground, based on a poem by Mikhail Lermontov. (English translation here.) These demon images were done at the end of his career before he was put in a mental hospital. See critical analysis here.) The story of the Fallen Angel/Demon's tainted love for the human Tamara has inspired many European artists. Far right is an earlier, more traditional image of a gypsy woman with fortune-telling cards.
Art can be a quiet, harmless accomodation to mental obsession and upset. It plays that role in my life.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/mikhailaleksandr00iare_0
July 20, 2016


Tragic Actresses, Zoo Cat, Farm Kitchen
 
More from old issues of Harper's Weekly (Links). Left, actress Eileen Hyman huddles against a wall in William Butler Yeats' tragic play On Bailie's Strand, and, right, actress Margaret Anglin appearing as Antigone, the tragic, heroic Greek king's daughter who defied her father to honor her brother's funeral. Also in the picture, a wild cat from an article on how wild animals are captured for zoos and, as a background frame, a photo of a farm woman in her kitchen (her butter churner is visible in bottom center).
I am rethinking my style. My aim here is to set up a surrealistic tableau. It doesn't make real-life sense, but it makes "dream" sense -- I'm here, I don't know what the hell's happening, but I'm thoroughly engaged and curious to see what happens next.
8/4/16: Entered this image in the Plastic Club's Member's Choice show.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_oYU-AQAAMAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_-WktAQAAMAAJ
July 19, 2016


Lost Painting that Inspired a Kipling Poem
  From a 1903 Harper's Weekly (Link1), a copy of a painting by 19th century Pre-Raphaelite Philip Burne-Jones, entitled The Vampire. The painting is now "lost," i.e., disappeared into a private collection. Burne-Jones was said to use stage actress Mrs. Patrick Campbell as a model for the femme fatale draining the life from the victim. Another admirer of Campbell was George Bernard Show, who wrote in a letter to her: "I want my dark lady. I want my angel. I want my tempter, I want my Freia with her apples. I want the lighter of my seven lamps of beauty, honour, laughter, music, love, life and immortality. I want my inspiration, my folly, my happiness, my divinity, my madness, my selfishness, my final sanity and sanctification, my transfiguration, my purification, my light across the sea, my palm across the desert, my garden of lovely flowers, my million nameless joys, my day's wage, my night's dream, my darling and my star." Burne-Jones' popular, widely-displayed painting inspired Rudyard Kipling's poem The Vampire, as described in this discussion of the impact of the painting on the vampire tradition. The painting is placed upon a framing collection of items from the 1954 catalog Merchandise presentation : specialists in merchandise presentation, demonstrations, displays, exhibits (Link2), showing various store display banners.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_ELJCAQAAIAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/W.L.StensgaardAndAssociatesInc.
July 17, 2016


Lady in Mirror, Mirrored
 
Illustration from a 1944 glass catalog How glass can make your new home lighter (Link1). The advertising copy says "No home is complete without at least full-length door mirror. A favorite with the entire family. Shows you how you look from head to toe..."
I am generally interested in images of women reflected in mirrors, especially young women from the era when my mother was young and I was an infant.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/HowGlassCanMakeYourNewHomeLighter
July 16, 2016


Victim of Volcano, Dancers, Baseball Fans
 
From a 1902 issue of Harper's Weekly (Link1), the center image shows a news photo of the damage from a 1902 volcanic eruption that destroyed the village of St. Pierre, pop. 30,000. The caption reads:
"A Mute Witness of the St. Pierre Horror: Among the debris [in the hospital]...was found the body shown in the photograph here. The upraised hand seems to indicate some last attempt to avert danger. Although the clothing was completely burned away, the body itself was lit tle charred... [T]he resemblance to the bodies found in the ruins of Pompeii was most striking."
At the bottom, from a 1913 issue of Harper's Weekly (Link2), a group of Massachusetts women recreate a Greek freize. The whole image is placed on a frame/background from the same issue, showing fans at an amateur baseball game.
Note: Today marks my first visit to the gym since 6/21, when I stubbed my right little toe. That's the day I did Courchesne Abstractions on Stencil Patterns. A productive period since then, perhaps, but I think I came a bit untethered and obsessive without exercise.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_PYU-AQAAMAAJ
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_oYU-AQAAMAAJ
July 16, 2016


Lady Knitting
  From a 1991 issue of the Rhode Island Medical Journal (Link1), an advertisement for an insulin drug portrays a woman sitting in a chair.
One criticism of my work is that I tend to focus on attractive women of childbearing age -- the "Male Gaze," as the feminists call it. Thinking about it, I don't feel guilty. Look at all the images of women -- in fashion, in porn, in religious iconography -- and they tend to draw from the same demographic. Is that a justification? Anyway, this nice lady knitting is intended to counteract that tendency in my selection of subjects.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/rhodeislandmedic7412rhod
July 15, 2016


Six Corrugation Patterns on Hexagonal Honeycomb
 
Base is the hexacomb pattern of a beehive, from the 1905 Praktischer wegweiser für rationelle bienenzucht (Link1: Google Translate: "Practical signpost for rational apiculture"). The six circular patterns are from the 1899 Allgemeine Tierzucht; ein Lehr- und Handbuch für Studierende und Praktiker (Link2: Google Translate: "General Livestock ; a teaching and Manual for Students and Practitioners"). The six circles represent different patterns in a "corrugation" process.
It was relaxing to float into the world of pure geometric composition. No bloody ghosts.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_nNtCAAAAYAAJ_2
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_S_dUAAAAYAAJ
July 14, 2016


Consquences of Allenby's Stroll into Jerusalem, 1917
   
From the English government via Wikimedia (Link1), a 1917 photograph of British General Edmund Allenby entering on foot into Jerusalem's Old City after the Battle of Jerusalem, when his army took the city from the Ottoman Empire. Allenby's triumphant entry on foot was considered a sensitive gesture, meant to spare the feelings of the city's inhabitants. But the unfortunate alliance of the Turks with the losing side in World War I and the subsequent loss of influence and territory was deeply felt in the Middle East. Next, a New York Evening Post editorial cartoon from a 1918 Cartoons magazine (Link2) shows how the event was seen around the world, as a continuation of the Crusades. This cartoon was captioned: "AT JERUSALEM: Richard Coeur de Lion: 'My dream come true!'". It shows the ghost of King Richard looking down proudly from a distance of five centuries at Allenby's victorious desert soldiers.
As a boy, I had a sentimental, romantic, pious view of the Crusades. In my current view, the Crusades were similar to the violent religious fanaticism of today's ISIS.
Odd how this period of my life contains so many detailed, thoughtful excursions into the past.
Sources:
Link1 www.flickr.com/photos/government_press_office/7169338186/
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_9HRIAAAAYAAJ
July 12, 2016


Contorted Elephant
 
From an 1892 Nast's Weekly (Link1), a political cartoon by Thomas Nast, showing the Republican elephant (which Nast introuced). It is superimposed on a magazine advertisement from the 1933 Film-Lovers Annual.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_BHFHAAAAYAAJ
Link1 archive.org/details/filmloversannual00dean_0
July 11, 2016


Armenian Patterns
 
Two superimposed images from books of Armenian culture. Underlying is what seems to be a drawing of a geometric rug containing pictures of animals, from the 1984 Hay mshakuyt'e [Armenian Culture], Book 2 (Link1). On top is what seems to be a cave drawing of a hunting scene from from the 1971 Hay mshakuyt'e [Armenian Culture], Book 1 (Link2). The book are in Armenian, so everything here is mainly guesswork.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/Hzhp02HayMshakuyte
Link1 archive.org/details/Hzhp01HayMshakuyte
July 11, 2016


The King and the Beggar Maid
       
To the right, a portion of Pre-Raphaelite painter Edward Burne-Jones' depiction of a Alfred Lord Tennyson's poem, showing (in right center) a simple beggar girl "more beautiful than the day" and, in the lower left, King Clophetua, who fell in love with her. See the story here. The image appeared in the 1908 Art Journal (Link1). Also, at upper left, a piece of jewelry from the 1909 Art Journal (Link2), displayed on a page ornament from the 1911 Alraune, die Geschichte eines lebenden Wesens (Link3; Google Translate: "Mandrake , the story of a living being"). Although I cannot read German, here is a synopsis of the book: "A scientist, Professor Jakob ten Brinken, interested in the laws of heredity, impregnates a prostitute in a laboratory with the semen of a hanged murderer. The prostitute conceives a female child who has no concept of love, whom the professor adopts. The girl, Alraune, suffers from obsessive sexuality and perverse relationships throughout her life. She learns of her unnatural origins and she avenges herself against the professor." There is also a film version of the Alraune story, starring Brigitte Helm.
Next: Cover picture from an old Kelsey printing equipment catalog (Link4). The Kelsey was a small printing press used for small runs of wedding invitations, business cards, etc. As a hobbyist, I used to own one in the late 1960's.
Next: A performance picture of a 1960's punk band from the magazine ReSearch (Link5), inside a frame from Social, a 1916 Cuban magazine. The image is ruined by a stray brush stroke of powder blue that I am too lazy to remove.
Next: In the same frame, an advertising photograph for men's grooming products, in a 1968 edition if The Australian Women's Weekly, showing a stylish woman stepping into a pool of water. (Link5)
Not pleased with this series. I may leave them in this short form. Not sure what's going on in my shaggy aged head.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187856
Link2 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187864
Link3 archive.org/details/alraunediegeschi00eweruoft
Link4 archive.org/details/SocialVolINo12Diciembre1916
Link3 archive.org/details/The_Australian_Womens_Weekly_25_12_1968
Link5 archive.org/details/ReSearchIndustrialCultureHandbook
Link6 archive.org/details/The_Australian_Womens_Weekly_25_12_1968
Link7 archive.org/details/NeonTypeDivisionTypefoundersChicago1962pt2
July 9, 2016


Goodbye Soldier, 1915
  A photograph from a 1915 Kriegs-album ("War Album") issue of the German-American magazine New Yorker Staats Zeitung (Link1: Google Translate "State Newspaper"). The English caption reads "The Volunteer's Farewell", a sentimental scene as the young volunteer heads off to the horrors of World War I, while his mother (or girlfriend) carries his rifle. War is on my mind on this centennial of that awful war; also a touch of Survivor's Guilt because I missed Vietnam, the war of my generation; and despair at the current consequences of my country's proxy-war foreign policy in the Middle East.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187864
July 5, 2016


Patience on a Monument of Grief
 
Old painting on stone background, Patience On A Monument Smiling At Grief by "second-wave" Pre-Raphaelite artist, the aristocratic J.R. Spencer-Stanhope. The image appears in the 1909 Art Journal (Link1). The image refers to a line in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, when one female character, Viola, concealing herself as a man, says to her secret love, the Duke:
"She never told her love,
But let concealment, like a worm i’th’ bud
Feed on her damask cheek. She pined in thought,
And with a green and yellow melancholy,
She sat like patience on a monument,
Smiling at grief. Was not this love indeed?"

I do not understand this speech.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187864
July 5, 2016


Fourth of July
 
Cover of sheet music to the 1942 wartime song Let's go!! : let's get started today!! (Link1), showing an extemely fit Uncle Sam getting ready for a fight. Sample lyric: "My country! 'Tis of thee,/is our song of liberty/To neglect, Not protect/Would mean catastrophe."
That's how I feel with an election coming up with NeoCon Warmonger Clinton and Unstable Narcissist Bully Trump.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/b10009462
July 4, 2016


Wartime Illuminated Letters
       
An illuminated initial letter "D" from an illustrated book of World War I memories, Ostpreussen-Chronik : Kriegsbilder aus den beiden Russen-Einfällen 1914/15 (Link1; Google Translate: "Ostpreussen Chronicle : War pictures from the two Russian invasions 1914/15"). It shows soldiers drinking while an old man sprawled on the ground.
Next, another image from the same book, an illuminated letter "J". It shows charging death's head mounted cavalry, presumably Cossacks. The scene and letter are superimposed on a photo of a model from the cover of a 1941 sewing crafts magazine, New Things Happen to Tatting, No. 159 (Link2). (Tatting is the handcraft lace seen on the model's wrist and breast pocket.) Another illuminated letter "W", showing refugees crowding to board a train, set on top of a picture of the Victoria Hall, in Leeds, from the 1906 Art Journal (Link3).
Next, again from the WWI picture book, a skeleton sits in the woods holding the sandglass of time and death. This time I removed the lettering becausse the illustration was so much larger than the lettering.
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_OHvzAAAAMAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/NewTatting159Coats
Link3 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187831
July 2, 2016


Clipper Ship Rigging and Protective Mother
 
Pictues of old square-rigged clipper ship rigging from a German officers navy memoirs, Seeteufel : Abenteuer aus meinem Leben (Item1) . It is set against a picture of a mother protecting two children from the 1903 Die moderne Plastik in Deutschland (Item2).
Sources:
NA
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_VFfNAAAAMAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_-ZdZAAAAYAAJ
June 30, 2016


New Friend in Fossil Land?
 
Car trip today to Cherry Hill, New Jersey, to visit jewelry and rock shop, Gary's Gem Garden looking for Trilobite fossils, but they were pricey -- cheapest one was $200. But as wife Janice and friend Ted looked over the fossils, they both suggested I look at the stately ammonite, much more affordable at $20. Ended up buying a pair and paid $15 apeice to have them mounted as pins. Will consider adopting the ammonite as my artistic signature instead of the trilobite, as on this one.
Sources:
NA
June 29, 2016


Sheet Music, Delilah, Rug and NASA Photograph
 
From the cover of sheet music for a 1919 piano song I've got a grand baby with a baby grand down in Dixieland (Link1), a woman perches on an open piano. Above her, a heart-shaped section of rug from the 1933 Congoleum Patterns (Link2). Below the piano, an Elihu Vedder painting of Delilah from the 1903 Arts Journal (Link3) Finally, the background behind the heart and piano is a slide from a 1957 NASA report Influence of Hot-Working Conditions on High-Temperature Properties of a Heat-Resistant Alloy (Link4).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/b10244578
Link2 archive.org/details/CongoleumCanada
Link3 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187807
Link4 archive.org/details/NASA_NTRS_Archive_19930092329
June 28, 2016


Mother & Kids at Bath Time, Jewels and Lace
 
In the center strip, a combination of the charcoal sketch for a painting "Twilight" by F. Cayley Robinson showing a mother at bath-time drying off her two children, centered in a fancy necklace designed by Alfred Gilbert. Both images are from the 1903 Arts Journal (Link1). The composition is set upon an image of lace from the 1800 Madame Goubaud's pillow lace patterns, and instructions in Honiton lace making (Link2).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187807
Link2 archive.org/details/PillowLace
June 28, 2016


Lasciate ogne speranza, voi ch'intrate
 
Or, in other words, from Dante, "Abandon Hope All Ye Who Enter". That is the caption on the bottom picture, an illustration of five women from The Divine Inferno titled "A Glimpse Into Hell" by American Symbolist painter Elihu Vedder. The image is taken from a 1903 edition of The Art Journal (Link1). Above and to the left is the head of a woman from the cover of a 1901 piano sheet music called Hiawatha: A Summer Idyll (Link2). The two are connected by a wreath from the 1870 Rustic adornments for homes of taste (Link3). (Note to Self: the wreath is too dark, I should have put a 10% layer of white over it.)
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187807
Link2 archive.org/details/b10019698
Link3 archive.org/details/rusticadornments00hibb
June 27, 2016


Three Dreamy Victorian Ladies
 
My treatment of an iconic romantic painting -- Albert Moore's canvas, showing three classical Greek ladies napping on a sofa. It's called The Dreamers. Here, my work runs perilously close to simply appropriating old work with fancy new filters. But I made one structural change, cropping a bit on the right for balance. The image is from an edition of the 1844 Art Journal (Link1).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187682
June 25, 2016


Antique Coins on Linoleum
 
Two sides of a Greek coin (a hekta) said to date from 400 B.C., from the Greek island of Lesbos. The left face depicts the head of the Minoan king's daughter Ariadne, the right face shows a lion gnawing on an animal bone. The images are from a 2014 Harlan J. Berk, Ltd., 190th Buy or Bid Sale catalog. (Link1). (Only 15 of these coins are known. This mint condition coin -- the best of them -- had a catalog price of $6,000. I consider that a bargain.) The coins are placed upon an assortment of samples from the 1933 Congoleum patterns (Link2).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/HJB190BBS
Link2 archive.org/details/CongoleumCanada
June 25, 2016


Old Men in Conversation
 
An image of two German men relaxing at an inn, from the 1906 Deutscher Humor im Bilde (Link1; Translation "German Humor in Pictures"). Above them, like a cartoon talk bubble, some pictures of jewelry from an 1844 Art Journal (Link2). The picture expresses my pleasure at getting together with old friends and shooting the breeze.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/deutscherhumorim00dobs
Link2 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187682
June 24, 2016


Angry Woman, Magic, Antique Tools
 
In the foreground, an engraving of a sculpture called Vengeance from an 1844 Art Journal (Link1). It shows a woman rising up from her knees, with a determined look on her face and a sword's hilt clasped in her hand. The statue was attributed to Samuel Fry. In the backgroun, a set of photos showing how to perform a card trick in a 1914 book by Burling Hull on Bulletin Of Latest Sleights And Tricks (Link2). Also in the background is a drawing of antique Roman rigging tools (I think) in the 1784 Le antichità romane (Link3).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187682
Link2 archive.org/details/BulletinOfLatestSleightsAndTricks
Link2 archive.org/details/gri_33125010859839
June 23, 2016


Woman Thinking Wistful Thoughts
   
Center is an engraving by Pre-Raphaelite painter Frederick Sandys, entitled If. It shows a young woman seated on a beach, moodily staring out to sea and absently chewing on a strand of her curly hair. It is from an 1849 edition of Art Journal (Link1). It is framed within a cover page from a 1963 Progress lighting fixture catalog (Link2) overlaid with a larger version of the engraving. For somparison, the second image shows the original engraving, showing how much my treatment adds color and shape.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187682
Link2 archive.org/details/ProgressLightingFixtures
June 23, 2016


Greek Girl Playing Jacks against Sleight of Hand Photos
   
From an 1862 Art Journal, an engraving of the famous painting by Frederic Leighton of a Greek Girl playing Knucklebones, an early version of today's game of Jacks (Item1). The Art Journal explained the girl has "a mood of gentle distraction... that is suited to the game of idle skill which occupies but does not engross her... Her thoughts may stray as they may toward some half-awakened love, or some dreamy pleasure in festival or dance." The four knucklebones appear in mid-air in the lower right of the painting. The painting is then placed upon a background of photographs from magician Burling Hull's 1914 book of magic tricks Master Sleights With Billiard Balls (Item2), which explains the "Lightning Ball Vanish," in which a magician makes a billard ball vanish by concealing it on the back of his hand, as seen in the picture on the lower right. Another element in the background is a stencil from the 1925 Decorators' guide and stencil catalogue (Link3). For somparison, the second image shows the original colors of the Leighton painting.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125006187682
Link2 archive.org/details/MasterSleightsWithBilliardBalls
Link3 archive.org/details/CanadianGypsumAndAlbastineLimited
June 22, 2016


Courchesne Abstractions on Stencil Patterns
 
There was an influential magazine published in Quebec during the 50's and 60's called Cahiers de Cite Libre (Link1). It was founded by future Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and opposed Francophone separatism. One of the artists who illustrated its articles in the late 60's was named Courchesne (sp?) and provided starkly simple black ink abstractions. Three of those appear in this image. Those three images are placed upon an illustration from the 1925 Decorators' guide and stencil catalogue (Link2). In the originals, those weird Couchese shapes were pure black on white; in my variation, the stencil colors of the background bleed through the pure black.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/2CAHIERSCITELIBRE1966
Link2 archive.org/details/CanadianGypsumAndAlbastineLimited
June 21, 2016


The Relationship Between Europe and England
 
The gruesome cover of a 1916 pro-German polemic Vampire Of The Continent written by German aristocrat Ernst zu Reventlow. The book blames all of Europe's problems from the 16th century to the time of writing upon an England consumed by greed, intent on "organized piracy and highway robbery". The Reventlow family also produced a famous race car driver and a feminist writer known as the "Bohemian Countess."
I offer it as a reference to the long and sometimes bloody relationship between England and Europe, and as an excuse to state my position on the upcoming Brexit vote allowing the British to leave the European Union. My position is that the English should vote to stay in for economic reasons and to minimize the chance of another war.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/EnglandVampireOfTheContinentReventlow1916_201606
June 21, 2016


Building a Tunnel in the City
 
From the 1876 Bibliothek der Unterhaltung und des Wissens (Link1; Google Translate: "Library of entertainment and knowledge"),a construction photo of the central electric railway in London, showing a work break during digging of the Bond Street Station.
In his youth, my maternal grandfather, Bob Guston, freshly arrived from Sweden, worked as a sandhog on tunnels under the river in Chicago. That's when he met the pretty Irish housemaid who became my grandmother.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_oOdT7TffRfkC_2
June 20, 2016


Composition in Time and Art
 
Four elements in one picture. The background is an Arabic fresco from an undated HISTOIRE DE FRESQUE (Link1). The circular element placed upon the fresco is an astrological timepiece from Old clocks and watches & their makers; being an historical and descriptive account of the different styles of clocks and watches of the past, in England and abroad, to which is added a list of eleven thousand makers (Link2). Next to that is a drawing of a naked woman from the 2002 Art Of Drawing: The Complete Course (Link3) and, below that, the six steps involved in drawing an owl from the 1913 What to draw and how to draw it (Link4).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/HistoireDeFresque2HistoryOfFresco
Link2 archive.org/details/oldclockswatches00brit_0
Link3 archive.org/details/ArtOfDrawing-TheCompleteCourse
Link4 archive.org/details/whattodrawhowtod00lutz
June 19, 2016


Treatments from Old Catalog
   
First image is from Eaton's Fall and Winter Catalogue 1899-1900 (Link1), a selection of Glassware. Eaton's ("Canada's Greatest Store") was a historic Toronto department store, which was sold to Sears in 1999 and shut down in 2002.
Second picture is a treatment of rings from the same catalog. The ring in the center is a MIZPAH ring which memorializes a bond or agreement or trust between two people.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/eatons1899190000eatouoft
June 18, 2016


Six Tableaux for Magic Lanterns
 
From a 1900 catalog of G. Gilmer, Catalogue No. 26. Appareils à Projections Lumineuses fixes et animées, accessoires: Appareils d'Agrandissements, Décors et Attractions Lumineux pour Théatres (Link1). Gilmer and his brother were suppliers of equipment for early Magic Lantern shows. These six slides are for Tableux Vivants, in which a female figure in tights is "dressed" by the projected image. A kind of precursor to today's movie computer-generated effects and tomorrow's Virtual Reality.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/GilmerLanternCatalog1900
June 18, 2016


The Abiding Pleasure of a Drink and Smoke
 
A cleric sits comfortably in a window seat, enjoying a cigar, a drink, and the afternoon light. An image from the 1906 Deutscher Humor im Bilde (Link1, Google Translate: "German Humor in Picture").
I miss smoking. I'd almost certainly be dead if I hadn't quit 30 years ago. But I still miss it....
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/deutscherhumorim00dobs
June 17, 2016


1940's Pinup
 
A modest pinup from a 1940's men's magazine, Night Life Tales (Link1), placed on a background of archaelogical patterns.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/Night_Life_Tales_v01n19_1940_Darwination-DPP
June 16, 2016


Children Examine Disinfected Water
 
Two little Indonesian girls examine two plastic bottles of drinkable water -- from a brochure SOLAR WATER DISINFECTION, by a Swiss group that promotes the use of exposure to sunlight in plastic bottles to create clean drinking water. (Link1).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SolarWaterDisinfection-English-Sodis
June 15, 2016


Watch Springs and Pocket Watch
 
In the foreground, a design from a 1905 catalog Watchsprings (Link1) from the Waltham Watch Company; the image is captioned "a dozen resilient springs". On top of that is a drawing of a pocket watch that appears in a 1911 catalog from the same company Waltham watches : some of their qualities, styles, trade-marks and prices for careful buyers to consider (Link2).
Note that the trademark Trilobite has been rendered as a pattern in the background frame.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/mainsprings00walt
Link2 archive.org/details/walthamwatchesso00walt
June 15, 2016


Knife Set Against Figure and Tea Kettle
 
From the 1897 Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration (Item1), in the foreground a collection of knives leaning against a wall. In the right background, a tea kettle set, and on the right a reclining figure.
Sources:
. Link1 archive.org/details/gri_33125009691763
June 14, 2016


Janice's Dying Rose Picture and My Interpretation of It
   
On the left, one of wife Janice's photographs from her Past Their Prime series, a poignant collection of pictures of flowers in the late stages of decay. On the right, my treatment of the same image.
Sources:
. NA
June 13, 2016


Crustacean Eggs
   
From chartx showing enlarged photographs of the eggs of the fairy shrimp, from a 2011 issue of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales (Link1).
These last images are strongly influenced by two brand new filters offered on Dreamscope, Petals and Jewels. Also, experimenting with placement and prominence of my Trilobite signature emblem.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/ProceedingsLinn133Linn
June 12, 2016


Street Crowd and Woman Eating Cracker
 
A composition of two works by Friedrich Karl Gotsch, one a large painting of an urban scene of the time and the other a pen sketch of a woman eating a cracker or candy bar, eyes boring into the artist. The images are from a large collection of various artists published in 1921 collection of Junge Kunst (Link1: "Young Art") by publisher bL, An illustration of spike-helmeted soldiers going off to the World War I front, provided with beverages by patriotic village women as the troop train slows at a local station. Image is from a 1921 collection of Junge Kunst (Link1: "Young Art") by a Liepzig publisher.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_sv4_AAAAIAAJ
June 12, 2016


Cheerful Send-off to the Trenches
 
An illustration of spike-helmeted soldiers going off to the World War I front, provided with beverages by patriotic village women as the troop train slows at a local station. Image is from the 1915 Unsere Bayern im felde ; erzählungen aus dem weltkriege, 1914/15, berichte von bayerischen feldzugsteilnehmern (Link1: Google translate: "Our Bayern in felde ; narratives from the world wars , 1914-15 , reports of Bavarian campaign of participants"). Note the excited Dachsund in the lower left. Nobody then knew the horrors awaiting the soldiers -- from both sides -- in the trenches of that war.
God, I hate war. And America faces an awful electoral choice, with Clinton who is a Neocon who believes in violence as an acceptable instrument of global political maneuvering and Trump who is a thin-skinned, ignorant and unpredictable bully!
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_2zFNAAAAMAAJ
June 11, 2016


Kinky German Orientalism
 
From the 1907 Blühende Gärten des Ostens : 78 Erzählungen, Gedichte und Schwaenke aus den Litteraturen des Orients (Link1; Google Translate, "Flower gardens of the East : 78 stories, poems and anecdotes from the literatures of the Orient"). The illustration is by artist and engraver Franz Christophe.
I am interested in this because of the artist's use of a symbol (an owl) in the upper right corner, which is similar to my experimentation with a trilobite as a personal signature symbol.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_JC7gAAAAMAAJ
June 11, 2016


Moralistic Tale for Young Girls
 
From the 1865 book of virtuous instruction called Moral emblems (Link1), an illustration to demonstrate the precept: "The Pot Goeth So Long to the Water Til At Last It Comes Broken Home." The accompanying poem tells the story of a girl who went to town with her clay pot to fetch water, but she got carried away playing games with the boys and broke it. Now she's heading home, facing shame with a broken pot. Feminist scholars can go into more detail on this as a warning against sexual activity.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_4hJEAQAAMAAJ
June 9, 2016


Catalog Cover Bouquet with Medallion
 
Central image is the cover image from the 1891 catalog of gardening seeds and supplies from A.B. Davis & Son (Link1). Inset in the circular center (instead of a simpering child) is a medallion from the L'art de terre chez les Poitevins : Suivi d'une étude sur l'ancienneté de la fabrication du verre en Poitou (Link2; Google Translate: The land art in Poitou : "Monitoring of a study on the age of the glass manufacturing in Poitou"). Poitou is the French province whose capital is Poitiers.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/BDavisSonmateri00ABDaD
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_7wU2AQAAMAAJ
June 9, 2016


Doomed Romanov Royals on Roof
 
From the 1922 account by Alexandra, consort of Czar Nicholas I, about the last days of the Czar's family, Die letzte Zarin : ihre Briefe and Nikolaus II. und ihre Tagebuchblätter von 1914 bis zur Ermordung (Link1: Google Translate: The last empress : her letters and Nicholas II and their diaries from 1914 to the murder), a photo of the Czar and his children on the roof of the house in Yakaterinburg where they were exiled after the October revolution. This was the city where the Czar and his family were murdered.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_wFCNlxSBEiIC
June 8, 2016


Jungle Warrior
 
From an 1896 Zeitschrift für Ethnologie (Link1: Google Translate: Magazine for Ethnology) article on indigienous tribal people living in the interior of the Philippine island of Luzon, a photograph by early explorer and businessman Alexander Schadenberg. The young warrior seems to hold a spear and shield.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_wFCNlxSBEiIC
June 8, 2016


Objects in Bird Stomachs, Linoleum, and Daisy Picker
 
Foreground, another sentimental portrait of a young girl, detaching daisy petals as she murmurs "He loves me, he loves me not", from Cassell's Family Magazine (Link1). Deep background is a layout of linoleum patterns from a 1960 catalog (Link2)
And the objects in the background circle are indigestible items removed from bird stomachs, taken from a public service advertisement in a 2007 Women's Health (Link3). Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_vKHQAAAAMAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/Congoleum-nairnInc.FineFloorsAndWalls1960
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_wMUDAAAAMBAJ
June 7, 2016


Aristocrats and Birds, Linoleum, Swaddled Colonial
 
Two young women stroll, feeding the birds outside a mansion, in another sentimental picture from Cassell's Family Magazine (Link1). They are placed on a linoleum pattern from the 1960 linoleum catalog (Link2), an inset of a swaddled colonial-era child from the 1813 Portraits, memoirs, and characters of remarkable persons from the reign of Edward the Third to the Revolution (Link3), and an actor in costume from a 1972 issue of The Talking Machine Review (Link4).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_vKHQAAAAMAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/Congoleum-nairnInc.FineFloorsAndWalls1960
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_vkUDAAAAYAAJ
Link1 archive.org/details/TMR18
June 6, 2016


Three 1870 Ladies
   
Three sentimental images of women, from the 1874 Cassell's Family Magazine (Item 1). They are clothed in the frilly dresses of the time and executed in an academic realistic style. They are captioned, from top left, "A Girl's Story"; top right, "A Maiden's Dream"; and the swooning woman at the bottom is captioned "Killed, with his Face to the Foe!"
Sources:
June 5, 2016


Sr. Theresa, Linoleum Pattern, Ruined Road
 
A portrait of St. Teresa of Avila from the cover of a recent religious book (Item1). The image is based on a painting by the 18th-century painter Francois Gerard. Her picture is displayed on a pattern composed of two images: (1) a linoleum pattern from a 1960 catalog by Congoleum (Item 2) and (2) and the scattered logs of an old Roman road through the wetlands from the 1898 Die römischen Moorbrücken in Deutschland (Item 3: Google Translate, "Roman Swamp Roads in Germany"). My new trilobite emblem/seal (like a Japanese chop)is also present.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SaintTeresaOfAvila
Link1 archive.org/details/Congoleum-nairnInc.FineFloorsAndWalls1960
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_w2UZAAAAYAAJ
June 4, 2016


Magic Trick Explained and Floor Stretch
     
In the background, a picture looking down at a woman doing a floor stretch from a 1989 Yoga Journal (Link1)), with her outreached arms at the top. In the foreground, at the bottom, a diagram from the 1908 Optical Illusions (Link2), showing the explanation of an illusion called "The Delphic Oracle" in which, the head of a woman appears against the background of a Greek temple; after a while, the exhibitor also appears in the temple by means of mirrors at a 45-degree angle.
In the second, expanded version I include (1) a trilobite signet from the 1891 Elemente der geologie (Link3) and (2) some eyes from the June 1920 issue of the movie magazine The Tatler (Link4).
I believe this is a transitional period. The third image uses the Trilobite motif as a form of signature.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_vOsDAAAAMBAJ
Link1 archive.org/details/OpticalIllusions_201605
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_vSoLAQAAIAAJ
Link4 archive.org/details/Tatler0620
June 3, 2016


Saucy and Haughty
   
Two women in one frame: left, a romantic 19th century painting of a Venetian flower seller, from a painting by the Austrian E. von Blaas, which appeared in an 1853 edition of the picture magazine Die Neue Gartenlaube (Link1); next society photographer Cecil Beaton's portrait, dated "around 1930," of Princess Natalie Paley, a descendant of the former Czar's Romanov dynasty, from the 1960 20th Century Photography By Museum Ludwig Cologne (Link2).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_vT0gAQAAMAAJ
Link1 archive.org/details/20thCenturyPhotographyByMuseumLudwigCologne
June 1, 2016


Tableau Under Bridge
   
Combination of two pictures: one shows the underside of a railroad bridge over the river Speer in Berlin, from the 1896 Berlin und seine Bauten (Link1; Google translate: "Berlin and its buildings"). The second is a picture from the 1864 202 Holzschnitte nach Zeichnungen (Link2: Google translate: "202 Woodcuts to Drawings"). It is an illustration of the German legend of the Erlking, the evil Elf King that abducts children to satisfy his daughters. This is probably an illustration to the Goethe poem Der Erlkoenig, which tells the sad story of a man on horseback trying to save his child from the Elf King's lascivious daughters. He is chased by the bearded Elf King, while the daughters (on the right) await their prey. Here is one translation of the Goethe poem. Another translation (with the original German) is here. Both legend and poem are powerful and have been set to music several times.

Who rides, so late, through night and wind?
It is the father with his child.
He has the boy well in his arm
He holds him safely, he keeps him warm.

"My son, why do you hide your face in fear?"
"Father, do you not see the Elf-king?
The Elf-king with crown and cape?"
"My son, it's a streak of fog."

"You dear child, come, go with me!
(Very) beautiful games I play with you;
many a colorful flower is on the beach,
My mother has many a golden robe."

"My father, my father, and hearest you not,
What the Elf-king quietly promises me?"
"Be calm, stay calm, my child;
Through scrawny leaves the wind is sighing."

"Do you, fine boy, want to go with me?
My daughters shall wait on you finely;
My daughters lead the nightly dance,
And rock and dance and sing to bring you in."

"My father, my father, and don't you see there
The Elf-king's daughters in the gloomy place?"
"My son, my son, I see it clearly:
There shimmer the old willows so grey."

"I love you, your beautiful form entices me;
And if you're not willing, then I will use force."
"My father, my father, he's touching me now!
The Elf-king has done me harm!"

It horrifies the father; he swiftly rides on,
He holds the moaning child in his arms,
Reaches the farm with great difficulty;
In his arms, the child was dead.

Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_vIsgAQAAMAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_vJEEAAAAYAAJ
May 31, 2016

Old School Computer Game Critters
   
In the left center, an illustration from the cover of the undated manual for the Apple II program called Creature Creator, popular in the 1980's, and in three corners, three creatures created by that program. Second image is a follow-up version that uses advanced distortion effects.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/A2_Creature_Creator_manual
May 30, 2016


Just a Reminder
 
I am getting annoyed by Clinton supporters' online demands that Bernie Sanders drop out of presidential race before July 25 beginning of convention. Before even California has voted! The Sanders movement represents an exciting new development in American political consciousness -- ohmigod, Democratic Socialism! -- and if the entrenched Democratic Party establishment shuts that movement out at the convention, it does so at its own risk. Especially since some polls show Sanders beating Trump while Clinton loses to Trump. I want Sanders to have influence over Democratic Platform and the future of the Democratic Party. I think he's earned it.


Posted a link to this image and my comment on one of my favorite political board, Democratic Underground, it has occasioned some controversy, which can be seen here. I generally don't partake in online disputes because to do so is time-wasting and emotionally upsetting.
May 29, 2016

Dreamscape Tool Repaired
     
First image since Dreamscope started misfiring. I hope the final result is a little bit better than the last batch, which have disappointed me. Image of a woman from a chandelier is from the 1884 German magazine Kunstgewerbeblatt; Monatschrift (Item1; Google Translate: 'Monthly Crafts Sheet"), superimposed on a 14th century Arabian rug from the same magazine. One unusual thing is that I sent my original image through the Dreamscape app with that same image used to define the style, with the result being the second image.
The third image is the first result, sent through additional distortion/geometric filters.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_vT0EAAAAYAAJ
May 26, 2016


Treatments with and without Dreamscape
     
   
   
I have grown accustomed to using the filters available on the Dreamscope app for color and texture in my treatment of old black and white images. But tonight Dreamscope was down, so I had to rely on other methods, mainly on GIMP's Seamless Filter, Nova Liner, Fractalize. I like the result on left. Second image was created after Dreamscope utilities were partially restored. Third image is a quick re-do after Dreamscape was restored.
The image is a studio photograph of German film actress Maria Koppenhoffer from a 1943 issue of the slick German propaganda magzine Volk und Welt. Her image is placed over an abstract photograph from the same magazine, which appears to show insect eggs among twigs. (Link1)
Next row, fourth and fifth image is a combination of two images. Top, a child named Marjorie observes a nesting dove in a tree from a 1908 issue of The Queensland Naturalist (Link2). Bottom, two men in an astronomers' workshop grinding telescope lenses, from a 1905 issue of Velhagen & Klasings Monatshefte. (Link3) Sixth image is a collage of models exhibiting various poses in a LIFE magazine. (Link4)
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/VolkUndWelt1.Q1943
Link2 archive.org/details/QueenslandnaturIIQuee
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_y1QiAQAAIAAJ
May 25, 2016


Paper Doll Dresses on Shell
 
A paper doll and a set of paper doll dresses from the 1911 Three hundred games and pastimes, or, What shall we do now? : a book of suggestions for children's games and employments (Link1) placed on a illustration of a sea shell from the 1808 Conchyliologie systâematique, et classification mâethodique des coquilles : offrant leurs figures, leur arrangement gâenâerique, leurs descriptions caractâeristiques, leurs noms, ainsi que leur synonymie en plusieurs langues : ouvrage destinâe áa faciliter l'âetude des coquilles, ainsi que leur disposition dans les cabinets d'histoire naturelle (Link2).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/threehundredgame0000luca
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_usoQAAAAIAAJ
May 24, 2016


God Abandons Disobedient Daughter
 
An illustration from the story of Richard Wagner's opera, the Ring Trilogy. Great God Wotan, displeased at his daughter Brunhilde's disobedience, disarms her and leaves her unconscious and helpless for the first man who comes along to take. But still, he loves her -- secretly Wotan is happy she stood up to him; he was just following the shrewish dictates of his nagging wife. So, here, he kisses the Valkyrie tenderly and surrounds her helpless body with raging fire, so only the bravest man can approach her. The cover image of an 1895 musical composition Magical Fire containing three "paraphrases" of the opera. (Link1)
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/b10335365
May 22, 2016


15th Century Animal Man
     
An image from 1488 of a figure adorned by animals, from the 1936 Sinnbilder deutscher Volkskunst (Link1; Google Translate; Symbols of German Folk Art), displayed on a twisted cover illustration from a 1985 edition of new Scientist. (Link2). Next to that is a variation of that figure, responding to an instinct to make my pictures "wilder" and less representational. Third picture is another early stick-man symbol from the same source, placed on a drawing of a ruined wall from the 1892 Die Baukunst der Griechen (Link3: Google Translate: Architecture of the Greeks).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/SinnbilderDeutscherVolkskunst
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_v4aUhsmgm
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_Y71LAAAAMAAJ
May 22, 2016


The Joy of Bathroom Furnishings
 
A composition of two illustrations from the 1956 catalog of bathroom fixtures, Accent on accessories by Hall-Mack. I like the combination of attractive young women modestly dressed in their bathrobes and nightdresses, reflected in mirrors -- something like the mood of the old 1970's Victoria's Secret catalogs (before they turned to exaggerated and aggressive provocation).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/HallMack
May 21, 2016


Simplified Procedure Images
       
     
Another procedural advance -- after composition, these images went through minimal filtering. Two Photoshop filters (Cutout, PosterEdges), two Gimp filters (DreamSmoothing, Painting), two DreamScope filters (Red/Blue Playing Card, Headcut Portrait) plus a third DreamScope.(Picasso) for color.
First image is composition of two pictures of jewelry from an 1897 Leipzig bookseller's magazine Velhagen & Klasings Monatshefte (Link1).
Second image is from a 1908 edition of that same magazine (Link2): a relief sculpture by Emil Epple showing biblical teenage bombshell Salome posing with the head of John the Baptist.
Third image is an illustration from an edition of 1001 Nights, perhaps the queen Scheherazade acting out one of her stories.
Fourth image is an image from the Plastic Club's Thursday morning Still Life workshop, which I am considering submitting for an upcoming exhibition.
Second row, fifth image, is a variation on a cover of a different issue of the Velhagen & Klasings Monatshefte (Link3), with an elephant motif added in concert with my horrified view of Belusconi-type TV hack Donald Trump as GOP presidential candidate.
Sixth image, from a 1907 issue of the magazine (Link4), seems to be a painting of a group of sirens serenading the crew of a passing ship. The tipoff is the skull in the sand.
Seventh image, from the same issue, part of a painting of a smiling woman relaxing on a sofa by the German artist Eugen Spiro.
The German magazine Velhagen & Klasings Monatshefte is a rich source of images, but when the Nazis came, it toed the party line, publishing the interesting -- if odious -- anti-semitic propagandist Johann von Leers, an aristocrat who, after the war, fled to Argentina and then Egypt, converted to Islam, and secured a post in Nasser's government.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_AF0iAQAAIAAJ
Link2 archive.org/details/bub_gb_nVgiAQAAIAAJ
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_blUiAQAAIAAJ
Link4 archive.org/details/bub_gb_vVYiAQAAIAAJ
May 16, 2016


Gerard Manley Hopkins in Dreamscope Experiment
     
 
Major technical advance. Took a black and white image of religious poet Gerard Manley Hopkins as Content from a 1997 tourist brochure The Gerard Manley Hopkins original in Hopkins House (Link1). Then I used a picture by American artist Stuart Davis (Link2) to provide Style. The result is at right. This marks the first time I've been able to use this essential feature of DreamScope.
Next row, another experiment with this technique, with an advertising image from from the 1918 Motion Picture Magazine (Link3)
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/gerardmanleyhopk00dono
Link2: www.indiana.edu/~iuam/online_modules/picturing_america/resources.php?info=9
Link3 archive.org/details/motionpicturemag14moti
May 15, 2016


Negative Patterns
     
     
First two images are from the 1943 Entomologica Americana (Link1), manipulations of diagrams showing "beautiful and intricate" wasp-like patterns found on various flying insects. (Link1)
Third image is a set of playing tokens from an X-Files-like role-playing game called Agents 200 (Link2).
Second row, fourth image is slides of tissue samples from Menschenaffen (Anthropomorphae); studien über entwickelung und schädelbau (Link3; Google Translate: "Apes (Anthropomorphae) studies on evolution and skull structure").
Fifth image is variations on illustrations of ape skulls from Link3.
Sixth image is a display of engravers' marks (filigrees) from the 1904 Les filigranes avec la crosse de Bâle (Link4).
In all of these, the key artistic element is the tiny patterns that appear in the spaces between the repeating positive elements. So be sure to look at those details by clicking to enlarge the view.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/entomolog232419431944broo
Link2 archive.org/details/THEAGENTS200
Link3 archive.org/details/menschenaffen01sele_1
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_81hGAAAAMAAJ
May 12, 2016


The Grace and Energy of Dance
       
 
The gracefully-posed central figure is German Expressionist dancer Clotilde von Derp from the 1921 Der moderne tanz (Link1: "The Modern Dance"). The two dancers at the bottom of the image are also from that book, showing sisters Grete and Else Weisenthal balancing and reaching out to each other in a horizontal direction. The dancers are placed against a background of a wood carving from the 1846 Album mittelalterlicher Kunst (Link2: "Album of Medieval Art") and a mystical symbol from the 1955 Indian book The Life Divine (Link3) by Indian mystic Sri Auobindo.
Next picture is Clotilde von Derp again, from a different book, the 1920 Lebendige Form : Rhythmus und Freiheit in Gymnastik Sport und Tanz (Link4). Also in the picture are a photograph of the composer's right hand from the 1908 book Franz Liszt (Link5) and program cover from the 1913 Die oper (Link6).
Third image is a casual ink sketch of a dancer (curiously faceless) leaping toward the bottom right corner, trailing a billowing feathered cape behind her. She is placed on a background of a wall composed of a Seattle tourist attraction, a wall of chewed bubble gum wads in a movie theatre parlor (Link7).
Fourth image is a diagram from an early attempt to find a written notation for dance moves, from Link1 It is superimposed on a decorative design from the 1926 A catalogue of perforated metalwork (Link8). Next row, fifth image, from Link1, is Russian ballerina Tamara Karsevina as the Firebird and Michel Fokine as prince Ivan in the 1910 ballet based on Igor Stravinsky's The Firebird. In the background, from the 1847 Le Moniteur des architectes (Link9) is an interior captioned "comptoir d'escompte. grande salle vue prise entre la plafond et le comble vitre" (Google Translate: "discount counter. large room shooting between the ceiling and the glass roof")
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_KRluAAAAMAAJ
Link2: archive.org/details/gri_33125013350265
Link3: archive.org/details/TheLifeDivineSriAurobindo
Link4 archive.org/details/bub_gb_TOBCAAAAIAAJ
Link5: archive.org/details/bub_gb_5rsHAQAAMAAJ
Link6: archive.org/details/bub_gb_NKE5AAAAIAAJ
Link7: imgur.com/kp2f19a
Link8: archive.org/details/ACatalogueOfPerforatedMetalwork_317
Link9 archive.org/details/gri_33125011199029
May 7, 2016


America's Sweetheart on Stack of Gears and Libyan Church Floor
 
Early 20th century movie darling Mary Pickford sits before her dressing table mirrors, in an image from the 1918 Motion Picture Magazine (Link1). That image is superimposed on a technical drawing of gears from a 1916 commercial catalog of Iron and semisteel castings (Link2). Both are then superimposed on an image of a 6th century floor design from the 1987 Earth And Ocean: The Terrestrial World In Early Byzantine Art (Link3).
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/motionpicturemag14moti
Link2: archive.org/details/RMEddyCompany
Link3: archive.org/details/EarthAndOceanTheTerrestrialWorldInEarlyByzantineArtByHenryMaguire
May 5, 2016


A Mayan Queen's Dream of Time Itself on a Chocolate Moon
 
Two Mayan glyphs from the 2009 Maya Numbers and The Mayan Calendar (Link1) by Mark Pitts: to the upper right, the Mayan figure of Time, struggling to pull the passage of days behind him; and to left and lower, a curious depiction of a specific Mayan Queen's Dream. They are shown on a background of chocolate shavings from the undated Encyclopedie Du Chocolat (Link2) and a depiction of a lunar-like cratered surface from the 1913 Hörbigers glacial-kosmogonie, eine neue entwickelungsgeschichte des weltalls und des sonnensystems auf grund der erkenntnis des widerstreites eines kosmischen neptunismus mit einem ebenso universellen plutonismus, nach den neuesten ergebnissen sämtlicher exakter forschungszweige (Link3; Google Translate: "Horbiger glacial cosmogony , a new history of development of the universe and the solar system all on the basis of knowledge of the conflict of a cosmic Neptunism with an equally universal Plutonismus , according to the latest outcomes of exact research branches").
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/TheMayaHieroglyphs02
Link2: archive.org/details/EncyclopedieDuChocolatByFrenchpdf.com
Link2: archive.org/details/bub_gb_NCcVAQAAMAAJ
May 4, 2016


Bronze Standard on a Pattern of Flags
 
A collection of provincial flags from the 1922 Lista oficial de los buques de guerra y de los mercantes de más de 50 toneladas de la Marina Española (Link1) forms the background for an etching of a Roman bronze standard from the 1848 Collectanea antiqua : etchings and notices of ancient remains, illustrative of the habits, customs, and history of past ages (Link2). The standard's letters read "COH OPTIMO MAXIM B", which, the text explains, identifies the standard as being from a Roman legion from the Varduli tribe.
Sources:
Link1 archive.org/details/bibliotecammb14966_1922
Link2: archive.org/details/gri_33125009314713
May 4, 2016


Gear Pattern
 
The altered diagram of a gear from the 1918 automobile manual Das Fahrgestall von Gaskraftwagen (Google Translate: The Fahrgestall Gas Cars; Link1), with a lot of distortion and filtering. (Note: There is an error in the bibliographic information on the page.) The gear design is overlaid on a swirling design from the 1983 As Through A Veil: Mystical Poetry In Islam (Link2), The design dates back to 1650 and is entitled "Mystical Journey."
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_-zlLAAAAMAAJ_2
Link2: archive.org/details/AsThroughAVeilMysticalPoetryInIslamAnnemarieSchimmel1982_201604
May 3, 2016


Frisian Women Costumes
   
From a 1900 German travel book on the Frisian Islands, Deutsche Nordeseeküste, Friesiche Inseln und Helgoland (Link1).
First, a photograph of two women stepping out of a weathered stone house.
Second, three girls on the seashore in traditional costume. This second image introduces two technical innovations: (1) color layer keyed to representation and (2) final step of GIMP black-and-white engrave filter.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_-94SAAAAYAAJ_2
May 2, 2016


May Day/Greek Easter Pattern
   
A chapter heading from a 1905 German book of Celtic folklore, Wind und Woge; keltische Sagen (Link1). First ornamental design is overlaid with the colors of a design from the 1868 The fleet of an Egyptian queen from the XVII. century before our era and ancient Egyptian military on parade : represented on a monument of the same age, both in some parts restored and published for the first time by the author after a copy taken from the terrace-temple of Dêr-el-Baheri : with an appendix containing the fishes of the Red Sea in the original size of the monument as ornaments beneath the fleet, a number, chronologically arranged, of representations of ancient Egyptian ships and some representations and inscriptions from various temples and tombs which have reference to the preceding (Link2).
The second image is a combination of two images -- a frontispiece and a chapter heading -- from the book of Celtic folklore cited agove (Link1), presumably translated into German.
To appreciate these pieces, click on them so they fill the screen and you can see the intricate patterning within the design.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_FBMnAAAAMAAJ
Link2: archive.org/details/gri_33125014475335
May 1, 2016


Hollywood Scandal Stories
     
From a 1960 edition of Hollywood gossipmonger Kenneth Anger's Hollywood Babylon II (Link1).
First image is froma photoshoot of actress Pier Angeli. The actress, originally from Sardinia, loved James Dean in full operatic tragedy. After he died, she died from an overdose of barbituates before she turned 40. She was considered for a role in The Godfather, but lost the role and settled for a role in B-movie horror flick called Octaman, shortly before her death.
Second image is an odd publicity shot from the 1958 movie The Party Crashers, featuring two tragic Hollywood figures, Frances Farmer in her last movie role and former child star Bobby Driscoll. They played mother and son. The photo seems to be shot through a basement window. Farmer was wrongfully committed to a mental hospital where she received shock treatments. Driscoll died of a drug overdose in an abandoned Manhattan tenement with no identification and was buried in a pauper's graveyard.
Third image is another weird shot, captioned "Propositioned by a Robot." The provenance is not clear. The actress resembles Joan Crawford. In the lower right, two nude exercise pictures from the 1907 Körperkultur des Weibes praktisch hygienische und praktisch ästhetische Winke, a physical culture handbook (Link2).
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/KennethAngerHollywoodBabylonII1985_201604
Link2: archive.org/details/bub_gb_rd8PAAAAYAAJ
April 27, 2016


Book of Strange Children
     
   
   
Ran across a mysterious Ukrainian book called Ренсом Ріґґз. Дім дивних дітей (Link1: Google Translate: "Ransom Riґґz . House bizarre children"). The description of the book, Google Translated from the Ukrainian, says Sixteen Jacob childhood accustomed to his grandfather's stories about his youth in the distant island county of Wales, in the shelter of strange children: the monsters with triple tongues, the invisible boy, the girl who knew how to fly The only side effect of these inventions were nightmares that tormented teenager. But once broke into a nightmare of his life, killed his grandfather reality. Apparently, the book originates from VKontakt (VK.COM), a Russian language website that bills itself "the largest European social network with over 100 million active users."
Here are some illustrations from this strange book, some overlaid on fancy framing devices. First image is a waif in rags in what seems to be an abandoned country estate. Second image is a figure lit from below, holding some sort of glowing flower or phallus. Third image is a little girl in Mary Janes and frilly dress who casts a weird shadow as if she were floating eight inches above the ground. Fourth image is a woman(?) and child walking out of a deep tunnel. Fifth image is a lovely photograph with a handwritten Ukrainian caption, showing a young girl sitting in chair holding a bowl of fruit and vegetables in her lap. Sixth image is a boy on a suburban sidewalk dressed in a bunny suit. Seventh image is a boy mugging before an unexploded bomb. I can't read the caption, but the first word is a highly literate, comic-book-style "PFFF-T."
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/Miss_P_H_for_P_Children
April 18, 2016


New Webpage Proprietor's Portrait
       
Time to change my image at top of this web page. The new image is a small pencil portrait done by Remo Frangiosa. It was done while I sat for Remo's portrait class over a two-week period at Philadelphia's historic Plastic Club. The previous image was a larger painting I commissioned from the Plastic Club's Andy Hoffmann.

Next are two other images also used as masthead portraits. Third image is an iPad self-portait in a coffee shop (approx. 2014). It is probably the best representation of my revulsion at the aging process and my sadness at the prospect of diminishing cognitive powers. Fourth is an attempt to limit portrait to the fewest number of facial features and still be recognizable (approx. 2012). (Sorry: unlike the other images on this page, these masthead pictures don't enlarge when clicked...)

For other images from the portrait class sitting, see entry for September 22, 2015 -- you'll have to click on the "2015 Archive" link at the top of this page.


South Sea Images
     
 
From the 1907 Te Tohunga; the ancient legends and traditions of the Maoris (Link1). The author and artist is Wilhelm Dittmer, who was born in German and moved to New Zealand. Dittmer's black and white illustrations are marvelous, and in these treatments, I do little more than add color, out of respect for the artist.
The first image is a manipulation of a chapter heading showing a mask with an eyehole pierced by a stick.
The second image seems to be a temple with statues built among rocks.
Third image is Matapo, the old blind man, who recounted to Dittmer the Maori creation myths: "Ah, these are my words to you, my wanderer." In the background, behind Matapo's dead eyes, the burning eyes of a spirit animal.
The fourth image is the artist's conception of the myth of an old-time supernatural battle, captioned "The Battle of the Giants." Part of the color in this image is provided by an underlay of linoleum samples (Link2). Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_Qq7fAAAAMAAJ
Link2: archive.org/details/ArmstrongsRubberTile
April 13, 2016


Variations on 1920 Print Ads
   
From a 1920 issue of the Canadian magazine National Pictorial (Link1), the first image shows a woman drying her hair in an open window, from an ad for a cocoanut oil shampoo. ("brings out the real life and lustre, natural wave and color, and makes your hair soft, fresh and luxuriant.") Background is the same set of linoleum samples (Link2) used in Trilobite image of April 11. A Moore family legend says my paternal grandmother was drying her red hair on the porch one afternoon. A passing artist glimpsed her and used thirty different shades of red to paint her. Nowadays, women use noisy handheld electric hair dryers to blow dry their hair.
Second image shows an Egyptian woman, from an ad for Egyptian Deities brand cigarettes (Link1) in the same magazine. In the background, some more decorative linoleum tiles from the tile catalog (Link2).
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/nationalpictoria00unse
Link2: archive.org/details/ArmstrongsRubberTile
April 12, 2016


Trilobites on Linoleum Samples
 
Five ftrilobite fossils from the 1876 Lethaea geognostica. Handbuch der erdgeschichte mit abbildungen der für die formationen bezeichnendsten versteinerungen (Link1: Google Translate: "Lethaea geognostica . Commission erdgeschichte with illustrations of the most characteristic formations fossils"). They are displayed on a sample page of linoleum from the 1954 The floor for atmosphere of luxury and refinement: Armstrong's rubber tile (Link2). I like trilobites because their design is so simple and familiar -- yet they died out in a mass extinction event about 250 million years ago. Horseshoe crabs are distant ancestors.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_csYQAAAAIAAJ
Link2: archive.org/details/ArmstrongsRubberTile
April 11, 2016


Lady Gardener Tends to Business
 
A woman reaches up to prune the top of a house plant, from an engraving in the 1874 issue of the Canadian illustrated magazine, The Favorite.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-The-Favorite_vol-03-no-10_March-07-1874-15940
April 11, 2016


Millwork (Lumber) Catalog Caprices
     
The first image is a composition composed of elements from the 1925 millwork catalog by A. Teachout Co. (Link1): an illustration of a glamorous lady descending a staircase to answer the front door, placed on a background of a peneled door. Second image is a happy couple embracing next to their new wooden door. Third image are two vertical wooden knobs from the millwork catalog, placed against two stencils from an 1898 Catalogue of window shades and shade hardware, paper hangers tools and supplies (Link2) and a circular plate design from the 1896 Ueber fremde einflusse in der chinesischen kunst (Link3; Google Translate: "About foreign influence in Chinese art").
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/TeachoutMillwork
Link2: archive.org/details/NationalWallPaperCo
Link3: archive.org/details/bub_gb_DdBJAAAAMAAJ
April 8, 2016


Theosophical Imaginings
     
In the late 19th century, when Theosophy was in full flower, adherents published a magazine called The Sphinx, often with illustrations by an artist who signed his work Fidus. Here, from an 1886 issue, an illustration captioned "Dream." Second image is a girl, communing with nature -- and a lizard which suns itself on the rock they share. Third image is another characteristic Fidus illustration, a slim young girl sitting on rocks, while in the sky behind her a mysterious figure appears in the clouds.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_3nwsAAAAYAAJ
April 4, 2016


Murder Most Foul
 
From the 1900 Der Richter und die Rechtspflege in der deutschen Vergangeheit : mit 159 Abbildungen und Beilagen nach den Originalen aus dem fünfzehnten bis achtzehnten Jahrhundert (Link1; Google Translate: "The judge and the administration of justice in the German Vergangeheit : with 159 illustrations and supplements to the originals from the fifteenth to the eighteenth century").
This woodcut illustrates a murder in the woods. The victim is in the lower right. The image is captioned "Ulrich of Württemberg murdered Hans von Hutten." Wikipedia explains the motive: "[Ulrich's] marriage was a very unhappy one, and having formed an affection for the wife of a knight named Hans von Hutten, a kinsman of Ulrich von Hutten, the Duke killed Hans in 1515 during an altercation." The murdering Duke had to flee in exile, but in time he returned as "Ulrich the Peasant" during the German Peasant's War in 1524-25. However, some sources dispute this story. Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_zHf18Zx181cC
April 2, 2016


Ogress on Wooden Ornament
 
A whimsical collage. An illustration from the 1898 The Arabian nights' entertainments (Link1), showing an ogress. In the background above and behind her, some ornaments based on English plants from the 1849 Art Journal (Link2). Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-rbsc_bourke_arabian-nights-entertainment_PJ7715L361898-15699
Link2: archive.org/details/gri_33125006187500
April 1, 2016


Calligraphic Initial Capitals
     
   
Distorted and recolored images from the 1882 Initial-Ornamentik des VIII bis XIII Jahrhunderts ("Ornamental Initials from the 8th to 13 Centuries") (Link1). First image is an initial "L" dated 990 AD from the Echternach Abbey, a Benedictine Monastery in Luxembourg. Second image is an initial "U" (I think) from a manuscript produced in the German town of Triere in 1378. Third image is a capital "Q" from the same source. Fourth image is a 12th century capital "P" from an English Romanesque letter from the 1919 classic The Styles of ornament : from prehistoric times to the middle of the XIXth century ; a series of 3500 examples arranged in historical order with descriptive text for the use of architects, designers, craftsmen and amateurs (Link2), labeled as being by "Josephus and other masters." Fifth image is from a manuscript created in Cologne, German, in Link1 again,


Calligraphy is on my mind because I just finished an English translation (from the Arabic) of a slim novel/memoir, Land of No Rain, by Amjad Nasser, a Jordanian poet and journalist. It tells the story of Younis Kattat, who returns to his native land after a 20-year political exile. Kattat was involved in a secular leftist grou and barely escaped arrest. The political involvement caused a rift between Kattat and his father, a respected Calligrapher. Kattat remembers his father's Thurday salons with learned disputations about styles of calligraphy and ancient Arab history. "[To young Khattat these salons] were like torture sessions for your restless body." Khattat's political connections were formed before the jihadist religious fundamentalism that currently dominates the Middle East. He seems as puzzled by its power as the rest of us.
Nasser's style names certain place in his hero's journey:
Also finished another novel, The Book of the Sultan's Seal: Strange Incidents from History in the City of Mars by Youssef Rakha, an Egyptian, translated into English from the Arabic by Paul Starkey. It tells the story of three weeks in the life of Mustafa Corbaci, a 30-year-old Cairo journalist, beginning with his abandonment of his pregnant wife, and continues through a series of magical realist events that occur during his everyday travels around Cairo. The author describes the story as Corbaci's "transformation during twenty-one days from a Europeanized intellectual to a semi-madman who believed he could perform magic deeds to resurrect the Islamic caliphate." In his imagination -- or is it reality? -- he meets the last Sultan of the long-dead Ottoman empire, who gives him the task of finding a forgotten calligraphic transcription of the Koran's Sura of Mary. He also is given a mysterious ring, which contains a calligraphic transcription that miraculously mirrors the map of his daily commute between his job and his mother's house. Corbaci also has an affair with Claudine, described in fine erotic detail. It is a promising set of puzzles, but curiously -- to the American reader accustomed to straight-line Stephen King narratives -- the story ends with no solution or progress in carrying out the Sultan's orders or in finding the mysterious ring. Corbaci just boards an airline to fly from Cairo to Beirut. Here is a long book review and an interview with the author.

4/12: Read another book, a translation from the French, called The Sexual Life of an Islamist in Paris, by Leila Marouane. It tells the story of Algerian-born Mohamed Ben Mokhtar, who moves from a majority-Arab suburb of Paris into central Paris -- changing his name to Basile Tocquard, whitening his skin and straightening his hair. In American terms, it is a tale of passing. Escaping the suffocating gaze of his family promises him sexual freedom, but he never quite loses his virginity in his new digs. Mohamed/Basile's life is a mixture of cosmopolitan cafe-sitting and traditional Islamic concerns -- the family pilgrimage to Mecca, the requirement that older brothers must marry before younger brothers can marry, etc. Here is a book review on an excellent website.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_HitAAAAAYAAJ_2
Link2: archive.org/details/bub_gb_TRtGAQAAMAAJ
March 28, 2016

Linoleum Flag with Woodcutter Eagle
 
Spanish artist Woodcutter Manero recently added another font, a "dingbat" symbol font. Here is one of his Eagle designs, laid on a pattern of linoleum samples from the 1956 ceramic tile catalog of American-Olean Tile Company (Link1). .
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/CeramicTileBooklet207
March 27, 2016


Aphorism from Arabic Novel
 
Another printers ornament from the 1904 issue of a German architectural magazine, Deutsche Bauzeitung, used as a setting for a line ("Every road has its walker") from a translation (from the Arabic) of a magical realist novel, The Book of the Sultan's Seal, by Egyptian writer Youssef Rakha. The saying is, to me, a sad acknowledgement that, in American terms, "you play the cards you're dealt." I haven't been happy with my situation this Easter weekend. The font is Woodcutter Future by that talented Spanish bad boy Woodcutter Manero.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_z43mAAAAMAAJ
March 27, 2016


Spring/Easter Meditations
   
First image is a seasonal message, combining Belle Epoque font with an Art Nouveau decorative frame from a 1904 issue of a German architectural magazine, Deutsche Bauzeitung.
I have religious feelings about the Easter holiday, mainly stirred by childhood memories of the intense step-by-bloody-step visualization of the Crucifixion of Jesus in Catholic Good Friday services. I have even composed a melodic poem/hymn about it.

Keep the silence
Won'cha keep the silence
Won'cha keep the silence
'Cuz a man dies young
Someday I hope to connect with the talent and equipment to produce that mournful lament. This year, I sat in a restaurant over an Italian hoagie and wrote a self-pitying poem.
My attachment to the meaning of Good Friday rather than Easter is because I believe it much more likely that a good man whose ideas challenge the status quo was cruelly executed in Roman times. I believe it much less likely that that his body miraculously rose from the dead after three days.
The second image is a profane image doing the rounds in printers' circles. (Thank, Al.) I am happy that I live in a society where the Religious Police are not likely to come knocking at my door for that sacreligious (and funny) image. I may occasionally publish a religiously sensitive image, with apologies to those offended, to ensure that our society retains its tradition of religious tolerance and diversity. That's the difference between advanced Western nations with their post-Reformation Secular traditions and many Middle-Eastern countries with their fundamentalist Islamic traditions.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_z43mAAAAMAAJ
March 27, 2016

Scrubbed-Up Ladies in Colorful 50's Bathrooms
 
A collage of different bathroom layouts from the 1953 American Standard catalog of bathroom fixtures, Plus value for your home (Link1). Six of the ladies pictured are "real" and three of them are just reflections in a mirror.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/PlusValueForYourHomeAmericanStandard
March 25, 2016


Unknown Craftsman of Ink Drawings and a Sidebar on the Kurds
     
An unidentified artist did a series of illustrations for Edison Mazda in the 1920's, advertising the wonders of light bulbs. The caption for this illustration was "The Well-Lighted Corner has the Well-Worn Chair." This is from a 1925 issue of the Canadian humor magazine, The Goblin (Link1). The second image shows a Chritmastime scene, made brighter by a tungsten filament bulb. Third image shows a daughter confiding in mother, headlined "The Party After the Party."
I added color, and some distortion of the lines, but if you examine closely the draftsmanship is superb. I can find no attribution, but could the artist have been Philadelphia illustrator Maxfield Parrish, who did color calendars for Edison Mazda?


Incidentally, the word Mazda is a reference to the Zoroastrian god of light. Some Kurds have been converting from Sunni Islam to Zorastrianism lately, which is one of the reasons that Isis fights them so fiercely as "apostates". Which brings me to the good news that two major American commentators, Trudy Rubin and The New York Times have spoken in cautious support of a national home for the Kurds, a people who have been scattered throughout the Middle East. It is a sentiment with which I agree. The same arguments for the establishment of Israel can be used for the establishment of Kurdistan. The Kurds do not oppress women the way many Middle Eastern societies do and the Kurds are fierce and disciplined fighters. The great warrior Saladin was a Kurd. America has opposed Kurdistan to placate Turkey -- but the current Turkish leader Erdogan is getting increasingly uncooperative.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/goblinv6n2toro
March 22, 2016

Scottish Designs
     
Recently ran across the archived collection of the Glasgow School of Art Library. The art scene in that Scottish town was the source of some powerful and distinctive ornament and designers, often very geometric. Here, treatments of pages from Kunstgewerbliche Schmuckformen fur die Flache v.I: Monatshefte fur die verzierende Kunst (Google Translate: "Handicraft jewelery forms for the Flat v.I : Monatshefte for the decorating Art") (Link1), one of the books in the Glasgow School of Arts' library.
Third image is a casual pen drawing of a little girl from a 1920 issue of the Canadian humor magazine The Goblin (Link2). She is overlaid on a diagram of geometric constructions from the Glasgow Art School's copy of the 1849 The infinity of geometric design exemplified (Link3).
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/kunstgewerbliche00anon
Link2: archive.org/details/infinityofgeomet00bill
Link3: archive.org/details/goblin00unse
March 20, 2016


Surveyor's Vision
 
Two charts overlaid from an 1872 German surveyor's manual, Zeitschrift für Vermessungswesen (Link1). Image represents a couple technical breakthroughs: erase black and add noise to border.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_o5tIAAAAMAAJ
March 19, 2016


Letterforms and Decoration
 
An alphabet from an undated Italian handwriting textbook Caligrafia Curso Completo (Link 1), overlaid by a pattern for a wooden mantel from the 1900 Patterns of grilles, mantels, wood carpet (Link2),
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/CALIGRAFIACURSOCOMPLETO
Link2: archive.org/details/FosterMungerCo
March 18, 2016


Irish on my Mind
 
From the 1922 A miscellany of Irish proverbs (Link1). Happy St. Patrick's Day. On my mind because of an upcoming co-op political issue.
Font is Celtic Hand.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/miscellanyofiris00orah
March 17, 2016


Book Notes: Neurotribes
 
Just finished a 500-page book, NeuroTribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity by Steve Silberman, a present from a relative who has an autistic family member.
Two quick notes:
Pictured above: in one incident, a clergyman asked a class to write a new set of commandments "better than God's". One autistic student began with the First Commandment pictured above.
Maybe later: an innovation at conferences for autists. They provide nametags (Interaction Signal Badges) with three optional settings:

  1. Red: "Nobody should try to interact with me."
  2. Yellow: "Only people I aleady know should interact with me, not strangers."
  3. Green: "I want to interact but am having trouble initiating, so please initiate an interaction with me."
Font is Woodcutter Vintage Comic. Sources: NA
March 16, 2016
B

Periodic Table
 
An experiment: running my filter sequence on a cartoonized periodic table of the elements, published by Indian science popularizer Arvind Gupta.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/PeriodicTableOfTheElements
March 16, 2016


Spirit of Liberation
 
Image of a red-gowned goddess of liberty, wearing the bonnet rouge, the red cap of liberty. She swings a rifle as a club to clobber (in lower right, from top) a policeman, a money-grubbing banker, and a clergyman. It's from the cover of a score for the 1880 song La Sociale.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-music_fsm_f958-15798
March 12, 2016


Revisiting Dutch Windmills
   


 
In soem sort of creative funk, I return to my first Philly Bob's Free for All image, a reworking of drawings from the 1850 Building Plans for Dutch Industrial Windmills. (Link1). The first image was done October 10, 2012 (on left). Here is a (somewhat modified version) of what I wrote at the time: "Windmill Re-Imagined: This is a freely manipulated image based on a detail from a plan for a Dutch windmill. To me, it is evocative of a 21st century space vehicle. The image was distorted, recolored, and finally sent through various Photoshop filters. Precise and handsome industrial draftsmanship in the original book."
New 2016 version is on right. Not sure I'm happy, but that goes with an old man's False Spring blues. Took way too long to do, but helped me recover from a very upsetting Co-op meeting on 3/10.
Font is zenfyrkait by Hungarian artist Eva Barabasne Olasz, now living in Ireland.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/TheoretischEnPractischMolenboek
March 12, 2016

Early Radio Scenes
   
Image from the 1925 Montgomery Ward Radio Catalog.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/RadioMontgomeryWard
March 11, 2016


A.A. Milne's Princesses of Imaginary Lands
     
   
Images by book illustrator Charles Robinson of little princesses in fantasy land, for A.A. Milne's 1922 Once On A Time.
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/onceontime00miln
March 8, 2016


Remembering Karen Carpenter
 
Watched a TV special on the 1970-1980's ballad singer Karen Carpenter, shown here playing her first instrument, the drums. She was noteworthy for her tragic death at 33 from Anorexia Nervosa and her sublime contralto voice. Here's a 6-minute NPR feature about her life, Here's another sample: Rainy Days and Mondays.
Sadly, I dismissed her at the time because she was not fashionable.


Ordered from Interlibrary Loan the top two prizewinners for translation from Arabic to English for 2015: The Book of the Sultan's Seal by Youssef Rakha and Land of No Rain by Amjad Nasser.
There also translation prizes for Dutch (The Letter for the King by Tonke Dragt and In Those Days by Remco Gampert), French (Harraga by Bouak Sansal and Portrait of a Man by Georges Perce), German (The End of Days by Jenny Erpenbeck and The Giraffe's Neck by Judith Schalansky), Spanish (Outlaws by Javier Cercas and Tristana by Benito Perez Galdos) and Swedish (The Listener by Tove Janson and A Brief Stop on the Road from Auschwitz by Goran Rosenberg).
Sources: NA
March 6, 2016

Chinese Box Design on Desert Caravan
 
An illustration from a 1940's children's book, The Negro and the Antelope (Link1), showing a caravan heading toward the Sultan's palace. Superimposed lightly on that illustration, a decoration from the top of a Chinese rosewood box, from the 1855 A catalogue of the Museum of Ornamental Art, at Marlborough House, Pall Mall (Link2)
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-130046-5084
Link2: archive.org/details/S00022921
March 5, 2016


Heartless Teenager
 
The face of an 18-year-old girl, Michelle Carter, who faces manslaughter charges for allegedly driving her boyfriend to commit suicde, with mesaages like "You always say you’re gonna do it [suicide], but you never do." Filters used Picasso II, Citradelic, and Playing Card.
Source: NA
March 4, 2016


Patriotic Flag Lady on Tile Pattern
 
Against a backround of color tile samples from the 1956 catalog of American Olean Tile Company (Link1), another cover from an 1896 piece of sheet music, Les Trois couleurs, ou ,quand je vois nos trois couleurs (link2) (Google Translate: The Three Colors, or,When I see our Three Colors, I sing) showing a woman waving the French flag,
Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/CeramicTileBooklet207
Link2: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-music_fsm_f995-15801
March 3, 2016


Floral Music Girl on Tile Pattern
 
Against a backround of color tile samples from the 1956 catalog of American Olean Tile Company (Link1), a graphic lady in blue rises from rococco floral decoration, from the cover of an 1896 piece of French sheet music, Au Pays Bleu (Link2).
Note: Tutorial on neural net system used in graphic "deep dream learning".
Also, interesting documentary on financial system collapse.

Sources:
Link1: archive.org/details/CeramicTileBooklet207
Link2: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-music_fsm_f975-15831
March 2, 2016


Art Teacher's Piano Top Decor
 
To make a long story short, my art teacher's car got wrecked and I offered to sell her my car. She was hobbled by injuries from the wreck, so I drove out to her house Monday to deliver the car and do the paperwork. This is a glimpse inside her house, a suburban family home full of bright paintings and dark heirloom furniture. The picture shows the eclectic collection of doo-dads on top of her piano.
This is the first time I have been without a car for a long time. It will help our fixed-income budget, but I miss at least the possibility of impulsive escape.
Source: My cell-phone photograph
March 2, 2016


Various Experiments with Filters on Old German Magazine
     
     
 
I do these shortened, picture-heavy postings when I'm too busy or too absorbed to do the full detailed bibliographic work. It's a shame, because one of the things I like to do is write.
Discovered a German magazine called Der Querschnitt (the Cross Section; Link1) which was to be shut down by the Nazis. It's something like the American Life Magazine. In the first picture, a girl's rowing team carries their boat out to a smooth lake.
In the next row, picture is from a different issue of Der Querschnitt (Link2). The editor, Alfred Flechtheim, had a habit of putting two stylistically related pictures on the same page -- like rhymes or coincidences. Here, he combines a blockish modernist statue (by Artistide Maillol) with a smiling photo of Spanish cabaret performer Laura Pinilla. Flechtheim's work is instructive to me in learning how to build collages out of such nonobvious graphical relationships.
Source:
Link5: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-116658-562
Link6: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-116651-555
February 28, 2016


Various Experiments with Filters on Public Domain Documents
       
     
     

I do these shortened, picture-heavy posts when I'm too busy or too absorbed to do full bibliographic work. It's a shame, because one of the things I like to do is write.
First image: two pictures of a trilobyte fossil, plus a dozing bear, all displayed on a wildly patterned book cover. Other pictures, experiments with my current graffiti/card method, happening too fast to keep track of sources. Many sources are Link1. Engraving/engineering pictures are from Link2. In the third row, the woman's face is from Why Catholics Pray to the Blessed Virgin (Link3), a 1907 painting by "Marianne Stokes entitled "Madonna and Child." Next one combines a carpet background with an illustration from the 1890 A Connecticutt Yankee in King Arthur's Court (Link3) by Mark Twain, showing an Arthurian "band with cymbals, harps, horns, and other horrors". Last picture in third row is a corset ad from the 1916 Montgomery Ward Catalog (Link4) -- the source of many of the patterns in this series. The NEMO corset "lifts and supports the most important vital organs."

Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/nvasouenir192307nati
Link2: archive.org/details/AmericanWoodWorkingMachineCo.Compete
Link3: archive.org/details/connecticutyanke00twaiuoft
Link4: archive.org/details/MontgomeryWard1916
February 20, 2016


Garbo, Heiroglyphics, Flags
 
A pic of Greta Garbo from the 1923 National Vaudeville Souvenir (Link1), combined with Egyptian hierographics and a Flags of the Nations page.
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/nvasouvenir192307nati
February 19, 2016


No Bizness like Show Bizness
 
Top left, a fashion drawing. Middle, a publicity photo of actress Mabel Ford. Bottom, a clown. All from the 1923 National Vaudeville Souvenir (Link1)
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/nvasouvenir192307nati
February 18, 2016


Fate Plays Cards with Man over Dish Set
 

Source:

February 17, 2016


Dancers Behind a Hotel Barbershop Mirror
   
Another attempt at communicating my fascination with mirrors. Foreground is a 2 basin/3 mirror setup from the 1931 barbershop catalog Mirror cases by Kochs. (Link1) Behind the usual artist's shading depicting the mirrors is a fascinating image from the 1923 National Vaudeville Souvenir (Link2), a publicity still (shown at right) of the Maria Morgan Dancers The California house shared by Morgan and film director Dorothy Arzner is on a list of LGBT historical sites. The graceful dancers -- in the Isadora Duncan tradition -- are the epitome of feminine beauty. But they could be 16-year-olds.
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/MirrorCasesByKochs
Link2: archive.org/details/nvasouvenir192307nati
February 15, 2016


Helmet, Kissy Mirror, Alien
 
In the middle, an actress kisses her reflection in a mirror from the 1923 National Vaudeville Souvenir (Link1). In the background, a photo of a combat vehicle gas mask, the FM51 from Avon Products (Link2). At bottom, a drawing of an alien from Blue Planet Project UFO TECHNOLOGY (Link3).
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/nvasouvenir192307nati
Link2: archive.org/details/AvonFM51Prospekt
Link3 archive.org/details/BluePlanetProjectUFOTECHNOLOGY_201602
--> February 15, 2016


Carpenter's Daydream
 
A workman installing a door in a 1929 catalog of millwork The Pease pricer (Link1), with an inset into the picture of the seamy cover from a 1960 paperback Untamed Lust (Link2).
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/ThePeasePricer129
Link2: archive.org/details/UntamedLust
February 14, 2016


Meditations on Mirrors
   
   
   
I have long been fascinated by artists' depiction of the hazy reflections in mirrors. So many removes from reality: the right-to-left world reflected left-to-right on a mirror, the artist removed from physical reality, the patterns on the depicted mirror removed from the hypothetical reality reflected in the mirror. Plus my own digital hallucination-making. Here are some variations on a 1931 catalog drawing of mirrors designed for fancy barbershops, the kind you'd see in downtown hotels, Mirror cases by Kochs. (Link1) Am enjoying the application of my latest technique -- two overlaid Dreamscape filters, Graffiti and Playing Card. If Dreamscape ever goes down, then might be able to duplicate loop with GMIC filters Stencil, Lyjek's Stencil, Old School 8 Bits, Edge Offsets, Thin Edges, Cartoon, Graphic Novel, Painting, Black Crayon Graffiti, Chalk It Up, Engrave, Gradient Norm, Isophotes, Mask Creator, Spotify, Marble, Mineral Mosaic, Shock Waves,
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/MirrorCasesByKochs

February 12, 2016


Refugee with Text
 

Source:
NA
February 11, 2016


Twenties Housewife Tending House Plant
 

Source:
Link2: archive.org/details/HartmansModernHome

February 10, 2016


Tintoretto Sea Battle Scene
 
From an 1871 reissue of The book of Ser Marco Polo, the Venetian, concerning the kingdoms and marvels of the East : newly translated and edited with notes (Link1), an engraved detail of a Tintoretto painting, used to show maritime construction. The image is placed on a barely visible illustration from the 1924 Hartman's modern home magazine (Link2).
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/bookofsermarcop01polo
Link2: archive.org/details/HartmansModernHome

February 8, 2016


Arab Street Scenes
   
From the 1905 Der kleine Krieg in Afrika : aus der Erinnerungs- und Bilder-Mappe eines Offiziers der französischen Fremden-Legion (Google Translate: The little war in Africa : from the memory and images Binder of an officer of the French Foreign Legion), left, two women preparing food in Morocco, and right, two Berber women discussing the day's events.
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_IN8TAAAAIAAJ
February 7, 2016


Aleppo Bird
   
Totally confused amd horrified by the Syrian Civil War. The Geneva Peace Talks were cancelled because of bloody bombing by Russia and Assad of old, old Aleppo. I find shelter from the horror of that five-year-old conflict -- which my own country bears partial responsibility for -- in color and pattern and history. Generally, I feel as if we're heading toward World War III. We're at the Spanish Civil War stage -- a brutal local conflict over government succession, fought by proxies, and used to perfect major powers' equipment and tactics.
Here is a picture of a Kata bird from Aleppo -- "[T]he flesh is so black and hard and dry that the Europeans never touch them" -- from the 1756 The natural history of Aleppo, and parts adjacent. Containing a description of the city, and the principal natural productions in its neighbourhood; together with an account of the climate, inhabitants, and diseases; particularly of the plague, with the methods used by the Europeans for their preservation.
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/naturalhistoryof00russ

February 6, 2016


The Syrian Situation
Note: This entry is disorganized, will eventually be rewritten.
   
    Bored with Art for Art's Sake and by the U.S. elections (Go Bernie), I have turned my attention to the Middle East. The situation is developing like the run-up to World War I, and I am determined to try to understand it:
Here, neighbors climb over rubble and fruit from an overturned cart caused by three bombs set off yesterday near the Sayyidah Zaynab mosque on the outskirts of Damascus. The mosque, sacred to Shiite Muslims, is said to be the grave of the granddaughter of Mohammed. Fifty people were reportedly killed; ISIS/ISIL/The Islamic State (identified with Sunni Muslims) claimed responsibiity. The blast was apparently aimed at disrupting proximity talks talks convened by the UN in Geneva. So far, two parties have appeared: (1) Assad's Syrian government, which is backed by Shiite Iran, Russia, and China; and (2) the High Negotiations Committee which is calling for the removal of Assad, which is backed by Saudi Arabia, Other companies calling for regime change include the United States, France, England, Germany, Jordan, Qatar, Turkey and Israel. I will be following these talks closely. Al Jazeera has a 24-hour feed.
Here is my tentative chart of the four players in the Geneva talks:
Pro-Assad ShiiteAnti-Assad Sunni"Terrorist"Kurds
Syria, Iran, Russia and China Saudi Arabia, U.S., France, England, Germany, Jordan, Qatar, Turkey, and Israel ISIS, ISIL, Islamic State Kurds
Al Jazeera is one of the most active sources covering the Geneva talks on Syria.
Another source is Al Arabiya.
Here's Twitter page of Steffan de Mistura, the patrician UN mediator, and of Kurds in Syria, who are excluded from the talks.
Changing Nature of Syrian Civil War 2011-2015
Isis & Geneva Talks
Al Arabiya-English
Peace Talks Falter
Kurdish Twitter
Russian vie
Saudi twitter

#YPG #SAA #FSA #RuAF #Putin #Assad
These two flags have not #future in #Syria because both of them include no #Kurds pic.twitter.com/wGDMdKCOAz

— 我是小小庫爾德人 (@JPY_Kurdish) January 16, 2016

Dan Sanchez view of Israel's role in Middle East
Arab Student Review of Zionist Plan for Middle East
Report that ISIS founder was CIA agent
Atlantic Council Think Tank on Cancelled Syria Talks
Atlantic Council on Aleppo Significance
AC: Going Slow on ISIS in Syria
Syria Committee on Human Rights


Here's UN page on Geneva talks.


Next pictures showing Syrian women from the opposition group displaying atrocity photos in Geneva.
Next photo, a picture of UN mediator Staffan de Mistura announcing the opening of the Geneva talks on Monday. Mistura is an old-school European nobleman, a marquess, who speaks Swedish, Italian, English, French, German, Spanish and Arabic (colloquial). I have an instinctive peasant's repulsion to someone of Mistura's rarified breeding. When I worked in New York, we had a European customer who was named "de" something. We peons behind the counter had a lot of fun dropping the "de" from his name on all the forms, and listening to his patiently correcting us. Despite this, Mistura seems to have done good diplomatic work in the past and it would be great if he's successful at making a cease-fire in Syria. But he's certainly no "man of the [Arab] street."
Source:
Link1: www.bbc.com

January 31, 2016

Indigenous Women
     

Source:

January 28, 2016


Human Sacrifice over Chimera
   

Source:

January 27, 2016


A Queen Has Died
 

Source:
NA
January 26, 2016


Lady Behind Tunnels
 
Three images in a collage:


Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_sTlRAAAAYAAJ
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_skYKAAAAIAAJ
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_skg_AQAAMAAJ

--> January 25, 2016

Happy Happy Heated Homes
 
A collage of images from the 1940 Better heating air conditioning better plumbing makes better homes (Link1), placed on a sample of wallpaper from the 1945 Imperial washable wallpapers (Link2)
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/HeatingPlumbingMakesBetterHomes
Link2: archive.org/details/ImperialWashableWallpapers

January 24, 2016


ISIS Update
 
Images from the propaganda magazine of ISIS, a slick production called Dabiq. The latest issue is out (Link1) and it is full of images of brutality perpetrated by ISIS. In this collage, there is (center) the burning alive of a captured Jordanian pilot; above that, a march of Coptic prisoners to their death in Egypt, and, top right, the execution of a "sodomite" by throwing him off a roof. At the bottom, ISIS soldiers clasp hands in solidarity.
One of the especially scary articles is Islam is the Religion of the Sword Not Pacifism, which extensively quotes the Koran to make the point that there must be constant warfare until the end of days when "Isa [Jesus] kills the Dajjal [Antichrist]" and thereafter "Islam and its justice will prevail on earth" -- a variation of the Christian vision of the Apocalypse. A previous issue offered justification in the Koran for the sexual slavery of women from other faiths.
ISIS' behavior -- grotesque brutality committed with one eye on the video camera -- leaves me puzzled. Most brutal regimes try to hide their crimes. I would be tempted to join the chorus of voices calling for a military expedition against ISIS, but I suspect that that is exactly what ISIS' backers want. Hold off until we figure out exactly where ISIS lines up in the polarities of Middle Eastern politics, Sunni/Shiite, Israel/Oil, etc. Meantime, let ISIS' neighbors handle it -- and abandon the goal of regime change in Syria.
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/dahiq13

January 24, 2016


Dark Side, Fear of Extinction
 
Some fearful images superimposed on another wallpaper pattern from the Style trend wallpapers 1952 showings (Link1),


Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/StyleTrendWallpapers0001
Link2: archive.org/details/bub_gb_75lAAQAAIAAJ
Link3 archive.org/details/bub_gb_Sx8XAAAAYAAJ

January 22, 2016

Berber Girl and Allegory Babes on Wallpaper
 
On a background of a wallpaper sample from the Style trend wallpapers 1952 showings (Link1), two pictures are inset.
At top left, from an 1888 edition of National Geographic (link2), a photo of a girl in Tunisia. The National Geographic photographer (Franklin Knott) explains: like the other girls in Michelet, Tunisia, [this girl] eluded the artist for many days. As fleet of foot as a gazelle, she would have made her escape had not the Mother Superior of the government hospital persuaded her to pose for the stranger, which she did with unconscious grace.
The other picture is an allegorical picture, labeled "Unity, Peace and Plenty" from the 1898 History of Freemasonry (Link3), with three posing women: (left a winged angel hold a branch; center, a toga'd and tiara'd figure holding a fasces; right, a naked girl holding a horn of plenty/cornucopia overflowing with produce.) (Link3).
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/StyleTrendWallpapers0001
Link2: archive.org/details/bub_gb_rgcVAAAAYAAJ
Link3: archive.org/details/MackeyHistoryT6
January 21, 2016


Maine Scenes
   
Another source of public domain images is Flickr's collection of the archives of institutions. The latest institution to join is The Camden (Maine) Public Library. Here is one of the collection's photos, a 1923 of a boat shed in Camden Harbor (Link1). Next to that is a 1904 photo of the road along Camden's Turnpike Drive (Link2).
Source:
Link1: www.flickr.com/photos/cplmaine/23165167202
Link2: www.flickr.com/photos/cplmaine/20207577935

January 19, 2016


Old Men and Young Girls
 
German writer Gerhart Hauptmann authored a play called Kaiser Karls Geisel, which tells a story about Charlegmagne. Here's one summary: The 80-year-old emperor Charlemagne falls for the 16-year-old hostage Gersuind, who is unprincipaled [sic] and uninhibited - an incarnation of the Saxon spirit. At last he must realize that he has been neglecting affairs of state while spending time trying to teach virtue to this heathen hussy, and he sends her to a convent. There, she redeems herself; she drinks poison and dies a holy death. Legendarily, Charlemagne did have a concubine or consort named 'Gersuinda of Saxon'.
The old king's interest in the young girl found its parallel on stage. The 16-year-old actress who played Gersuinda, Ida Orloff, became a mistress to 44-year-old Hauptmann. The affair ended; Orloff went on to be an author and translator, ended up committing suicide in Vienna in 1945 fearing wartime rape. Her picture in the role of Gersuinda appeared in a 1906 edition of the arts magazine Westermanns Monatshefte (Link1). Here two of Orloff's pictures are laid over a background of four different colored Japanese prints from another edition of Westermanns Monatshefte (Link2).
Source:
Link1 archive.org/details/bub_gb_-xEMAAAAYAAJ Link2: archive.org/details/bub_gb_tR8_AQAAMAAJ

January 18, 2016


School Science in India
     
Designs based on headings from a recent children's science textbook in Hindi by the educational group Bal Vaigbanyik. The illustrator has a playful, fluent style in their line drawings. The book was uploaded by Indian educator Arvind Gupta. Middle image is a single illustration. Right one is a detail from one of the chapter headings.
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/NHM177028

January 16, 2016


Monkey Puzzle Tree
 
An Auraucaria Imbracata of South America (also known as the Monkey Puzzle Tree) from the 1875 Die Neuere Schopfungsgeschichte nach dem gegenwurtigen Stande der Naturwissenschaften (Link1).
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/NHM177028

January 16, 2016


Collage: Flying Child, XIII Death Card, Mounted Knight
 

Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/TheDanceOfDeathDibdin
Link2: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-122624-2082
Link3: archive.org/details/bub_gb_0q5DAAAAYAAJ
January 13, 2016

Solitary Woman Staring Out Window
 
A painting called "The Window" by the German Impressionist Lesser Ury, from the 1906 cultural magazine Westermanns Monatshefte.
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/bub_gb_tR8_AQAAMAAJ

January 12, 2016


Intimidating Eyes
 
I recently was talking to someone with Asperger's, and when I asked her why she didn't look people in the eye when they were talking, she said "Eyes are intimidating." She said the increase in the number of diagnosed "Aspies" may be evolutionary. This piece is drawn from my thinking about what she said about eyes. It's a collage of two pictures from 1940's Catholic Church pamphlets, recently uploaded by Notre Dame University.

Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/idealmarriagehow00obri
Link2 archive.org/details/brewingstormshor00obri
January 11, 2016

Turbines and Numbers
 

Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-128738-4864
January 11, 2016

Family Visit
   

Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/cu31924032520516
Link2 archive.org/details/SECVRR_vtrbms
January 10, 2016

Eagle Artist Card Clock
 


Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/NorthernLightsFairyTalesOfThePeopleOfTheNorth
Link2 archive.org/details/ClocksAndWatches_918
Link3: archive.org/details/cu31924032520516

January 11, 2016

Playing Card Double Image
 
An experimental image, learning to calibrate angles in frames. Image is an old playing card, from the 1906 Les cartes à jouer du XIV au XX siècle (Link1).
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-122624-2082
January 6, 2016


Jewelry, Indian Lady, Cell Phone
 

Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/SamplePageFromRajaRaviVarma
Link2: archive.org/details/Mens_Health_November_2015_MY
Link3: https://archive.org/details/perle00n
January 5, 2016

Lady, Abs, & Skeletons
 
A collage based on three sources:

Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/Mens_Health_November_2015_MY
Link2 archive.org/details/SamplePageFromRajaRaviVarma
Link3: archive.org/details/TheDanceOfDeathDibdin
January 5, 2016

Three Horizon/Frame Pairs
 
A collage based three sources:

Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/Mens_Health_November_2015_MY
Link2 archive.org/details/SamplePageFromRajaRaviVarma
Link3 i.imgur.com/mJtU0ny.jpg
January 4, 2016

15th Century and 21st Century Death
 
A collage based on two sources:

Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/LeDanzeMacabreInItalia1901
Link2 archive.org/details/DabiqMagazine12

January 2, 2016

Dance Macabre: Abbot and Pipes
 
A clergyman is hauled off by skeletal death in an image from the 1902 The Dance of Death in a series of engravings on wood from designs attributed to Hans Holbein with a treatise on the subject by Francis Douce, also Holbein's Bible cuts consisting of ninety engravings on wood with an introduction by Thomas Frognall Dibdin (Link1). The accompanying text explains: "Death, having despoiled him of his mitre and crozier,[the Abbot] resists with all his might." The action takes place partly obscured by a design composed of plumbing fixtures from the 1929 Metal Woodworkers' Tools, specifically "double bracket basin cocks".(Link2).
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/TheDanceOfDeathDibdin
Link3 archive.org/details/MilwaukeeBrassManufacturingCompany0001
January 2, 2016


Little Girl in Catalog Landscape
 
At the top, barely visible, another image from the hellish visions of the 1782 La Tentation de Saint Antoine : ornée de figures et de musique (The Temptation of St. Anthony (Link1)). In the middle, a little girl stares at her reflection in a plate mirror door from a 1920 catalog from Chicago and Riverdale Lumber Co., Catalogue no. 41: high grade interior trim, built in furniture, sash doors, hardwood flooring, lumber and hardware (Link2). From the same source, in the middle, some art crystal glass windows. Finally, two copies of a solid steel shaper cutter from the 1929 Metal Woodworkers' Tools (Link3).
Source:
Link1: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-rbsc-volt_tentation-saint-antoine_PQ2066S6T41781-15401
Link2 archive.org/details/ChicagoandRiverdaleLumberCo.0001
Link3 archive.org/details/MilwaukeeBrassManufacturingCompany0001
January 1, 2016


Mother & Daughter Moment over Maps
 
A picture of Ukrainian politician Julia Tymoshenko with her daughter Eugenia from an article, Lobbyarbeit Tymoschenko 52 15 (Link1). The picture is overlaid on a collage of weather maps of Europe and the Middle East from Computer modelling in atmospheric and oceanic sciences : building knowledge (Link2).
Source:
Link1 archive.org/details/LobbyarbeitTymochenko5215
Link2: archive.org/details/springer_10.1007-978-3-662-06381-1 December 31, 2015


Bathtub Time & The Sufferings of St. Anthony
   
Two bathroom scenes from the 1955 New Ideas in Tile catalog(Link1), with insets of illustrations from the 1782 La Tentation de Saint Antoine : ornée de figures et de musique (The Temptation of St. Anthony (Link2)).
Source:
Link1 archive.org/details/NewIdeasInTile
Link2: archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-rbsc-volt_tentation-saint-antoine_PQ2066S6T41781-15401 December 30, 2015


New Year Reorganization
 
As another calendar page flutters away -- my 71st -- it's time to put away last year's Philly Bob's Free for All into the 2015 Archive. I also insert a link to the archive in the upper right corner of the masthead, along with other years.
To mark the occasion, a typographical treatment of the year, using a decoration from the 1560 Ornement de Ducerceau (Link1), which contains architectural and ornamental work of the du Cerceau family. The font is Unlearned Bitmap by font designer Brian Kent, also known as Aenigma.
Source:
Link1 archive.org/details/ornementdeducerc00andr
December 29, 2015


To contact Philly-Bob, email me at bobmoore [at symbol] pobox.com (of course, replace "[at symbol]" with "@"].
Masthead Portrait by Remo Frangiosa, 2015


12/29/2015