Monday, March 22, 2010

March is Pyle's Month









Howard Pyle's birthday was on March 5th. He would have been 157 this year. While I had a clear idea to post a few things in his honor, I've happily been busy, with a couple of illustration jobs, work on the Walter Crane book, and a convention.

So let me get back to that, before we lose March-
Recently, I had hopes of expanding the book I put out on Howard Pyle back in 2006. When I first put that together, the primary goal was to make some of Pyle's work available to a market that had very little access to his imagery. It was a long, hard sell, and I needed help to convince Dover it was worth it. The book recently went into a second printing, and before it did I had hopes of adding more material to the original edition—but it didn't work out. The result is, I had gathered materials, that will very likely never be reprinted in their original format. So until the next print run, here are a few rarely seen pieces from smaller, less-likely to be noticed, Howard Pyle works.

First up were a few small books. The first is from 1892— Called Dorothy Q Together with A Ballad of the Boston Tea Party and Grandmother's Story of Bunker Hill. (They just don't write titles like that anymore...) These historical pieces were written by Oliver Wendall Holmes, (sr.) father of a very important justice of the supreme court in the first half of the 20th century. This charming little volume has scores of Pyle ink pieces, and a few wash pieces also. The second title is one of Pyle's own writing—The Price of Blood appeared in 1899. It has the look of a story originally published as magazine chapters, but I can't be sure at this time—I'll check on it—It has a three-color frontispiece, red, black, and yellow. The other small pieces (chapter-heads) are 2 color, red and black. Pyle was about to come into his heyday at this time, teaching, and soon to begin to work with a greatly improved method of color printing, which would finally allow him to reproduce paintings accurately. These two books—while nice examples of work at the time—are not likely to be appreciated by today's audiences, and will likely remain silent artifacts of the past century.

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Working on this, and with a pointer from friend Scott Kraft, I found the blog of Ian Schoenherr. A fine illustrator in his own right, Schoenherr keeps up the family ways, and turns out an AMAZING blog on our buddy Howard Pyle. If Pyle's methods, details, and effects interest you, head on over and check out Ian's Howard Pyle blog. And many thanks to Ian for helping me straighten out some facts on this post!

3 comments:

Ian Schoenherr said...

I'm glad to hear you're at work on a Walter Crane book. Did you know Pyle met Crane once? It happened in the spring of 1892 during Crane's tour of the US. He talks about it in his memoirs:

"My collection was shown at the Arts Club [in Philadelphia], a tasteful building designed by a young English architect, a pupil, I believe, of Mr. Bodley's; a dinner was given there in my honour and to inaugurate the opening. Among the guests I was interested to meet Mr. Howard Pyle, the distinguished artist, whose work I had so often admired in the American magazines."

kev ferrara said...

Hey, thanks much for these. Love your Pyle book!

I look forward to checking back.

(Nice illustration, btw.)

kev

Jeff A. Menges said...

Thanks for the note on Crane Ian, work on the project is moving right along...

Kev- I am so glad to reach some folks who are as interested in this material as I am — I hope you do check back.

Thanks!

Jeff