Showing posts with label swans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label swans. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Il giornalino della Domenica


cover by Della Valle, 1906

Il giornalino della Domenica was the most beautiful and innovative children's periodical
published in Italy at the beginning of the 20th century. It was founded in Florence 
by Luigi Bertelli (1858-1920), a journalist and children's book author better known as Vamba.
The most notable of Vamba's children's books is the humorous Il giornalino di Gian Burrasca
which was first published in installments in Il giornalino della Domenica and is still in print.
(like many Italian children of the '60s, I both read the book and watched the tv series derived from it
 in which the leading role, a rebellious little boy, was played by the female pop star Rita Pavone).

cover by Baby (Roberto Bracco), 1906

cover by Umberto Brunelleschi, 1907

cover by R. Bernardi, 1908


two covers by Antonio Rubino, 1908

The contents of Il giornalino della Domenica were characterized by a strong pedagogical intent and
 markedly patriotic tone. At the time Italy had been unified for less than 50 years, and the magazine 
 carried on the Risorgimento purpose to "make Italians" by promoting a common language and cultural values. 
The contributors were among the most prominent Italian writers of the period, including Luigi Capuana, 
Edmondo De Amicis, Giovanni Pascoli, Grazia Deledda, Emilio Salgari, Matilde Serao, Sem Benelli, 
F.T. Marinetti, Scipio Slataper, Roberto Bracco Ada Negri, and Luigi Pirandello. 





three covers by Ottorino Andreini, 1909-10

Il giornalino's first issue came out June 24, 1906. Due to economical difficulties, its publication
 was interrupted between 1911 and 1913, then continued, with a series of ups and downs, until 1927.
From the beginning the magazine adopted an avant-garde style, and was characterized by the quality
 of its illustrations, created by some of the leading artists of the time. Antonio Rubino, Filiberto Scarpelli,
 Umberto Brunelleschi, Ugo Finozzi, Marcello Dudovich, Mario Pompei, Sergio Tofano, Ezio Anichini, Lorenzo Viani 
and many others, for a total of over 150 artists, were featured in Il giornalino during its sixteen years' run. 

cover by Filiberto Scarpelli, 1909


two covers by Giuseppe Biasi, 1907-10

Il giornalino was aesthetically remarkable for many reasons, including its avant-garde style, 
its pioneering use of photographs and color offset printing, the attractive clarity of its layouts, 
and the quality of its paper. Such attention to high graphic standards was rare in children's publishing,
 and makes it still one of the most beautiful children's periodicals ever published in Italy.

cover by Argo, 1919

cover by N. Borifina, 1919

The cover illustrations were modern, ironic and elegant, and closely reflected the artistic trends
 of the time, from the initial Art Nouveau influence to the Art Deco style of the 1920s.
A series of competitions organized by the magazine for its covers ushered in a season of exhibitions
 of the illustrations in various events, including the Biennale of Decorative Arts in Monza in 1923.
The competitions were part of the magazine's efforts in discovering and supporting new talents,
and many who began at Il giornalino went on on to become important illustrators and commercial artists.

cover by Alberto Alberti, 1920

cover by Armando Bandinelli, 1920

cover by Sto (Sergio Tofano), 1921

For this first selection of covers I have chosen a rather frequent subject, little girls
interacting with various domesticated animals and pets. More galleries will follow.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

An Illustrated Life


Le Monde A Envers, (Pomme d'Api), 1942

To celebrate my daughter Michelle, who just found out that she's been accepted 
for an Erasmus exchange stay at the Académie Royale des Beaux Arts in Brussels,
today's post is dedicated to Elisabeth Ivanovsky, a very talented and prolific painter 
and illustrator who spent most of her life in Belgium. A big thanks to the administrator 
of Ivanovsky's facebook pagea great resource with photos, books and information.

Et moi de m’encourir (Pomme d'Api), 1945

Elisavieta Andreevna Ivanovskaia was born in 1910 in Moldova, Russia. Her aristocratic family lost their home 
and property during the revolution, before the province where they lived became part of Romania in 1919. 
As a child Elisabeth loved to draw, and at eleven she hand lettered and illustrated a series of ten tales
 written by her older brother Valentin. At 18 she graduated in drawing, painting, printmaking, costume and set design.
 Wanting to become a self sufficient professional artist, she decided to continue her studies in the West,
 and chose the Higher Institute of Decorative Arts (La Cambre) recently established in Brussels
 in the spirit of the Bauhaus. In 1932 she moved to Belgium and began following the courses of book illustration
 with Joris Minne and of theater sets and costumes with the writer and playwright Herman Teirlinck.

Cirkus, 1933 (reprinted in 2010 by éditions MeMo)

While studying Ivanovsky employed her creativity to make ends meet, and in 1933  produced Cirkus
a portfolio of seven watercolor stencils which became her first published work in the West. 
The strong, simple and elegant shapes of these early works show similarities with both 
the Soviet children's books of the time and European Art Deco illustration.






When Ivanovsky graduated in the arts of printing and book illustration in 1934, two members
 of the Board of Examiners, struck by her extraordinary talent, helped her to launch her career: 
the publisher Sikkel commissioned her pictures for the famous Flemish writer Baekelmans Lode, 
while the French novelist and poet Franz Hellens asked her to illustrate one of his books.
 Hellens, whose wife was Russian, invited Ivanovsky to spend the summer at his home in Walloon Brabant.
Thanks to him, she came into contact with the then Belgian literary world and met the French poet
 René Meurant, whom she married. Between 1934 and 1936 Ivanovsky illustrated several titles, including
 Two Russian Tales, Large and SmallLoads of stories, La Mort dans l'Âme, Saint Nicolas
and Story of Bass, Bassina, Boulou



original artworks for Grands et Petits (Large and Small), 1934

character for le Roman de Renard, 1935


 Histoire de Bass, Bassina, Boulou, 1936, written by Franz Hellens







Ivanovsky collaborated with numerous French and Flemish writers.
Bestiaire des Songes, 1943, was produced with her poet husband René Meurant

Pomme d’Api (republished in 2007 as Les très petits by éditions MeMo)

Between 1940 and 1950 Ivanovsky and Meurant also created the very successful series 
of miniature books Pomme d’Api for the Belgian publisher Éditions des Artistes.



Et moi de m’encourir (Pomme d'Api), 1945

Contes du Soleil, 1956

As times changed, Ivanovsky' developed a new illustrative style and techniques, and in the postwar years
 she mainly illustrated tender and humorous books for small childrenFrom 1937 she began a long
 and fruitful collaboration with Marcelle Verité, and these two notable ladies of children's literature
 worked together for nearly fifty years: their last common title, Lili ladybug, was released in 1985.


L'Alphabet de Pierrot, 1963



Tip Tip the Postman, 1968

The 23 albums of the Tip Tip series (1967-70) were Ivanovsky's last collaboration 
with the Belgian publisher Desclée de Brouwer

Ivanovsky's studio in her home in the outskirts of Bruxelles, where she lived from 1946 until her death.
She passed away in 2006, and has since been remembered and celebrated in Moldava, Belgium and France.
 Her bibliography contains 346 original titles published in 23 languages ​​in 26 countries.

Monday, August 19, 2013

Eclectic Delights


poster for Overlook Press, early 1970s

When I started the Animalarium a little over four years ago, one of my first posts
was dedicated to Milton Glaser, who has been one of my heroes for a long long time.
As more of his works surface online, today I am even more impressed by the quality 
and variety of his immense artistic and graphic output. Having recently watched
the documentary Milton Glaser: to Inform and Delight and a number of his lectures and
 interviewsI am inspired to pay homage again to this giant of visual communication 
and overall gracious human being. The following images come from various 
online sources, but most of them were first featured on the website of the 


Book covers, 1959-60



Colorvision brochure, 1963

Show, The Magazine of the Arts, September 1963

poster to promote book, 1969 


bird for Unicef poster, late 1960s–early 1970s

Sans tabac poster, 1977

San Diego Jazz Festival, 1983

Night of The Snow Leopard, 1983






two sketches for the Buffalo Zoological Gardens, 1983

Illustration for Le Poète Assassiné by Apollinarie, 1984

Catskill Cuisine, 1990s

Lonely Cat, 2003

poster for Overlook Press, 2011

poster for the Cooperstown Summer Music Festival, 2013

still going strong after 60 years...


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