Showing posts with label Circle Fine Art Corp.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Circle Fine Art Corp.. Show all posts

Thursday, January 9, 2020

Ronald Searle: I Am Lonely

These past few blog posts could convey the false impression that it was commonplace at one time for an artist to take his published New Yorker cartoons (in the case of Lee Lorenz) or covers (in the case of Ronald Searle) and to use them to create related limited edition lithographs for sale to the public. It was not. These were rare occurrences that were not widely imitated. Why not? In the days before the founding of the Cartoon Bank, it was not easy to get prints of favorite cartoons. Wouldn't limited edition lithographs have satisfied an unmet need?

Perhaps. The lithographs in these cases were not faithful prints; they were creations artistically distinct from the published cartoons and covers. Demand would by no means have been automatic. Circle Gallery apparently misread the public demand and issued the first two Lorenz prints in editions of 300. Prices in the gallery were generally high and much of the edition may have remained unsold. Whether or not all these prints did eventually find buyers, they do not turn up very frequently on the secondary market today.

Searle's case was different. He was already issuing lithographs in editions typically of 99 on a regular—approximately monthly—basis, with considerable success. Thus a transatlantic market for his prints was already present. To occasionally adapt a popular magazine cover idea of his for the lithographic medium must have seemed a natural enough idea. Still, for the majority of his many New Yorker covers there is no corresponding lithograph, and the overwhelming majority of his lithographs have no relation whatsoever to his New Yorker work.

Searle also created at least one lithographic variation on a cover theme, as he apparently did with his New Yorker cover of January 13, 1973. The concept seems tailored very specifically to the perceived needs of the New Yorker: A business man holds a cigar contentedly, smiling from within a seashell on the beach. Searle later gave this illustration the title The Escapist in his 1978 monograph Ronald Searle. Would such an unusual image have found favor in the print market among Searle fans? He apparently thought not. Two years later he reimagined the cover as a lithograph, changing the orientation to emphasize the horizontal lines of the ocean and removing the gregarious businessman altogether. Instead Searle placed one of his popular cats inside the seashell, but here the cat stares out harrowed and discontented. Searle titled the print I Am Lonely, which would not at all correspond to the sardonically cheerful mood of The Escapist. It does, however, match the tone of other noteworthy cat lithographs, specifically Nobody Loves Me (1974) and Nobody Wants Me (1977) which are themselves graphically arresting meditations on individual isolation.
Ronald Searle
The Escapist

The New Yorker, January 13, 1973


Ronald Searle
I Am Lonely
Hors commerce aside from the edition of 99, 1975



Ronald Searle
Nobody Loves Me
Edition of 99, 1974

Ronald Searle
Nobody Wants Me
Edition of 99, 1977



Note:  I will return to the Searle lithographs Nobody Loves Me and Nobody Wants Me with more to say in future posts. I will also show a couple of additional lithographs by Lee Lorenz for good measure.

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Friday, January 3, 2020

Lee Lorenz: In the Beginning

In the Beginning is apparently the second color lithographic edition created for the Circle Fine Art Corporation by New Yorker art editor Lee Lorenz. It was struck in January 1990 at the American Atelier in New York and released in November of that year. It bears the edition code LLG 101, whereas Weight Watcher was LLG 100. The lithograph is accompanied by documentation which describes how the edition was created. The lithograph itself is of course a play on Michelangelo's Creation of Adam from the Sistine Chapel ceiling.

Lee Lorenz
In the Beginning
No. 264/300, 1990



Lee Lorenz
In the Beginning
No. 264/300, 1990




Lee Lorenz
eBay Listing Accessed January 1, 2019


Lee Lorenz
eBay Item Description Accessed January 1, 2019



Note:  Evidently this is redrawn from a New Yorker cartoon, but when did it appear in the magazine? My search skills have come up short today.

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Thursday, January 2, 2020

Lee Lorenz: Weight Watcher

For those of us who started off this new year resolving to eat better and stay fit, the New Yorker's former art editor Lee Lorenz has an important reality check. His message is conveyed in a lively color lithograph issued in a signed, limited edition of 300. The title might be Weight Watcher according to a notation on the verso. The date of publication should be 1989 or 1990 based on the issue date of the New Yorker cartoon on which it is based. This lithograph was probably printed by American Atelier for the Circle Fine Art Corporation of Chicago and New York City. I recall seeing it at the Circle Gallery around that time.
Lee Lorenz
Weight Watcher [?]
No. 143/300, c. 1989

The deckle edge suggests a paper stock of good quality.
Lee Lorenz
Weight Watcher [?]
No. 143/300, c. 1989


Grant Zahajko Auctions, LLC, which is to auction this print on January 9, 2020, states that the lithograph is "signed in unverified hand," as if handwriting this bad could belong to anyone other than Mr. Lorenz—or perhaps his physician.




Verso

Lee Lorenz
Grant Zahajko Auctions, LLC
January 9, 2020
Item Description Accessed January 1, 2019


Lee Lorenz
Grant Zahajko Auctions, LLC
January 9, 2020
Item Description Accessed January 1, 2019




The color lithograph is redrawn from a black and white 1989 New Yorker cartoon. At the time, Mr. Lorenz was the art editor of the magazine. He was later to be named the cartoon editor. 
Lee Lorenz
The New Yorker, February 20, 1989, page 42

Cartoons by Lee Lorenz and Jack Ziegler

Lee Lorenz
Weight Watcher [?]
No. 143/300, c. 1989
                                              

January 16, 2020 Update:  Sold!




Note:  Among its many purposes, this blog serves as an unofficial resource for information about New Yorker cartoonists. Over the years I have tried to preserve numerous examples of cartoon artist's signatures and handwriting. The auction house, which apparently obtained the artist's name from the pencil notation in an unknown hand on the verso, could very easily have verified the signature with a simple Google search. Is that asking too much of an auctioneer?

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