Calendar: February 22

Year: Day to Day Men: February 22

White Cloth

The twenty-second of February in 1925 marks the birth date of American writer and illustrator Edward St. John Gorey. A Tony Award winner for his costume design, he is noted for his distinctive pen and ink drawings that depicted unsettling narrative scenes in Victorian and Edwardian settings.

Born in Chicago, Illinois to Edward Leo Gorey and Helen Dunham Garvery, Edward Gorey began drawing at an early age and had taught himself to read by the age of three. After skipping several grades, he entered the progressive Francis W. Parker School in the ninth grade. An exceptional student, Gorey had the highest regional scores on college boards and, upon graduation, had scholarships to Harvard, Yale and other institutions. After graduation at the age of seventeen, he enrolled at the Art Institute of Chicago for art courses. During World War II, Gorey entered the U.S. Army in 1943 and served primarily at Utah’s Dugway Proving Grounds until the end of the war. 

Gorey enrolled at Harvard University in 1946, majoring in French literature, and became a co-founder of the influential Poets Theatre with friends Frank O’Hara, John Ashbery, Violet Lang and Alison Lurie. In 1953, he was offered a position with Doubleday’s imprint, Doubleday Anchor, in New York City. Gorey quickly became a significant figure in New York’s design circles. He designed over fifty covers for the imprint and gained recognition as a major commercial illustrator. Duting his career, the number of published works illustrated by Gorey, not including his own, exceeded five hundred. In the early 1960s, he became a life-long freelancer who both illustrated others’ work as well as his own. The first of these was the well-received 1953 “The Unstrung Harp”, one of the early examples of the graphic novel movement.

In the early 1940s while in the Army, Gorey established an early association with New York City’s mid-town Gotham Book Mart. A voracious reader, he started accumulating a unique library which at the time of his death number some twenty-five thousand books. Over the years, he developed friendships with both Frances Steloff, the bookshop’s founder, and Andreas Brown, who later eventually became the bookshop’s owner. When Gorey founded his own private press imprint, Fantod Press, the Gotham Book Mart became a major seller of Gorey’s books and, at the end of 1967, an exhibition space for his drawings. Gorey would exhibit his work there for the next thirty-two years; Andreas Brown would become one of the coexecutors of Gorey’s estate. 

Edward Gorey was always interested in the theater and became involved with off-Broadway productions. In his later years living on Cape Cod, he wrote and directed many evening productions, some of which featured his own paper-mâché puppet ensemble called Le Theatricule Stoique. The first of his productions was “Lost Shoelaces” which premiered in the small village of Woods Hole near Martha’s Vineyard in August of 1987. His last production was “The White Canoe: An Opera Seria for Hand Puppets”, with a libretto by Gorey and score by composer Daniel James Wolf. Performed posthumously under the direction of Carol Verburg, the opera’s puppet stage was created by renowned set designers Helen Pond and Herbert Senn.

Gorey wrote and illustrated one hundred-sixteen of his own works. Beginning in 1961 with the publisher Diogenes Verlag, his works have been translated into fifteen languages. In 1972, Gorey published his first anthology, “Amphigorey”, which contained fifteen of his early works; three more anthologies followed and have become the cornerstones of his body of work. Gorey’s interest in book design expanded his work into other forms including miniature books, pop-up books and books with movable parts. In 1975, he became interested in printmaking and explored this medium for the next twenty-five years through a collaboration with printmaker Emily Trevor for the production of both etchings and holographs. In 1979, Gorey relocated to a house he purchased  on the Yarmouth Port Common of Cape Cod where he continued his publications, theater plays and commercial projects. 

Edward St. John Gorey passed away at the age of seventy-five at the Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis, Massachusetts on the fifteen of April in 2000. After his death, friend and coexecutor Andreas Brown discovered a cache of unpublished work, both complete and incomplete. Gorey’s Yarmouth house is now the Edward Gorey House Museum. The bulk of his estate was given to a charitable trust benefitting cats and dogs, as well asl, other species, including insects and bats.

Notes:  After his arrival in New York City in 1953, Edward Gorey became a frequent attendee and admirer of Russian ballet choreographer George Balanchine’s New York City Ballet. He attended every performance of every production that Balanchine had choreographed and considered Balanchine a major influence on his work. 

In February of 1980, Edward Gorey was asked to design an animated introduction for Boston Public Television’s “Mystery” series. His work with animator Derek Lamb and team produced what, almost forty-five years later, is considered by many to be Gorey’s most iconic work.  

The Edward Gorey House and Museum in Yarmouth Port, Massachusetts is open for visits. Its online site, with information on exhibitions and its store, can be found at: https://www.edwardgoreyhouse.org

Top Insert Image: Richard Avedon, “Edward Gorey, Cape Cod, Massachusetts”, October 18, 1992, Gelatin Silver Print, Richard Avedon Foundation

Second and Third Insert Images: Edward Gorey, “Mystery”, Intro for Boston Public Television Series, 1980, Film Gifs

Bottom Insert Image: Edward Gorey, Cover Illustration for John Bellairs’s “The Chessmen of Doom”, Johnny Dixon Mystery Series, 1989, Dial Books

Hendrik Goltzius

Hendrik Goltzius, “Alexander and Bucephalus (Quirinal)”,  1590-1591, Red Chalk on Paper, Teylers Museum, Haarlem, Netherlands

Hendrik Goltzius made a long-awated journey to italy in 1590 when he was in his early thirties and already an established significant Dutch artist. He wanted to create a series of engravings of classical works like his Farnese Hercules. This is one of his original Roman drawings for the engravings that were acquired by Queen Christiana of Sweden and given later to the Teylers Museum in Haarlem.

Bucephalus, (ox-head in Greek), was Alexander the Great’s massive horse, one of the most famous horses in antiquity. The horse died from fatal injuries at the Battle of the Hydaspes in June 326 BCC in which Alexander’s army defeated King Porus of the now Punjab region of India.

Carlos Soto

Carlos Soto, “Libertad”, Linocut

Carlos Soto is a New York-based artist. Soto is a theatre maker, performer and designer concerned with the body as a site in which narrative threads of the personal, sexual, social and political become knotted; focusing on the poetics of the moving body and its opposition to language; broaching the unspeakable: absence, solitude, the monstrous, anger, horror and pleasure.

Henry Justice Ford

Henry Justice Ford, Illustration of Beowulf from Andrew Lang’s  “The Red Book of Animal Stories”, 1899

Henry Justice Ford was a prolific and successful English artist and illustrator, active from 1886 through to the late 1920s. Sometimes known as H. J. Ford or Henry J. Ford, he came to public attention when he provided the numerous beautiful illustrations for Andrew Lang’s Fairy Books, which captured the imagination of a generation of British children and were sold worldwide in the 1880s and 1890s.

Tim Doyle

Tim Doyle, “Pyramid”, Silk Screen Print, 18 x 24 Inches, Edition of 100

Tim Doyle is an illustrator and print-maker working out of Austin, Texas.  Growing up in the suburban sprawl of the Dallas area, he turned inward and sullen, only finding  joy in comic books and television and video games.

Moving to Austin, Texas in 1999 to fulfill a life-long dream of not living in Dallas, Doyle begun painting and showing in galleries in 2001.  He self-published a diary zine, ‘Amazing Adult Fantasy’ from 2001-2003.  Doyle has held many nerd-friendly jobs, including running a small chain of comic-book stores, as well as being the art director/ lead designer for MONDO from 2004-2009.

Doyle launched his own company Nakatomi Inc. in January of 2009. In the Summer of 2009, Tim Doyle along with artist Clint Wilson built their own screen printing studio Nakatomi Print Labs, in which they and other artists work out of, as well as do commercial printing for outside clients. A print of “Pyramid” is available through Nakatomi.

Reblogged with thanks to https://geekynerfherder.blogspot.com

Alex Ross

Alex Ross, “The Invisible Man”

Nelson Alexander “Alex” Ross is an American comic book writer and artist known for his painted interiors, covers and design work. He has done projects for both Marvel and DC Comics, such as the 1996 miniseries “Kingdom Come, which Ross co-wrote. His feature film work includes concerpt and narrative art for “Spiderman” and Spiderman 2″, the DVD package art for the film “Unbreakable”.

Frank Stockton

Illustrations by Frank Stockton

New York-based illustrator Frank Stockton’s impressive body of work represents a combination of expert draughtsmanship and a talent for innovative graphic storytelling. He has a BFA in Illustration from Art Center College of Design. His artwork tells stories plucked out from the realms of his brilliantly wacky imagination, resulting in his ‘fancy comic book style’ garnering attention from publications such as Esquire, The New Yorker, GQ, and Penthouse.

“I don’t think you can be a great illustrator if you’re not a good artist. What I value in art is the unexpected, or a sense that the artist had total freedom when he or she created the piece. ‘Freedom’ for me is when the artist lives the piece, as opposed to conceives it. I have to trust my gut though since it’s not something you can measure.”- Frank Stockton

Ravi Zupa

Ravi Zupa, “Sineater”, Illustration, Poster

Ravi Zupa is an eclectic and self-taught American artist from Denver, Colorado that creates interesting pastiche prints, manufactured sculptures, music videos and big installations using a variety of styles and techniques. He finds his biggest inspiration in books, the bulk of different cultures, mythologies, and imagery from around the world and many different epochs.

His art is colored with contemporaneity and political awareness and treats issues like violence, struggle, anarchism, dystopia, pop culture, power, ideology, and political figures. His studio practice combines several art techniques: lithography, painting, assemblage sculpture, collage,, drawing, and ceramic.

Cliff Nielsen

Illustrations by Cliff Nielsen

Cliff Nielsen is best known for his work on projects such as Star Wars, The X-Files, Chronicles of Narnia among many projects including advertising campaigns, designs, and magazines. He studied in both traditional and digital illustration and graduated as valedictorian from Art Center College of Design in CA. His illustrations have been recognized for their excellence by the Society of Illustrators, Print, and Spectrum among others.