Showing posts with label Joseph Cornell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joseph Cornell. Show all posts

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Take Another Look at Cigar Box Lids






An Accidental Mysteries “Blast from the Past,” December 16, 2008.


THANK GOD FOR OTHER PEOPLE’S COLLECTIONS, because I don’t have the money, space or time to collect it all. I do have the desire to collect it all, but left brain (and wife) says stop. I found a collector, Robert Madison, who apparently loves the beauty, variety and history of cigar box lids. His collection is enormous.

I am reminded of the cigar box that Tatum O’Neal (as “Addie”) carried in the movie Paper Moon. It was Cremo brand. It was the perfect metaphor for those few things she held dear to her life. She carried it—held it tight everywhere she went. As a kid, I loved cigar boxes. I guess I still do. Cigar boxes are the perfect size for kid stuff—baseball cards, crayons, coins, secrets—whatever. Cigar boxes are kid-sized—the way they open is lovely and inviting. And as far as design, they always look so regal and important. On the lid was usually an illustration or name of some mysterious, important person, almost always with a strange non-Anglo name. And, because the boxes were so substantial, people saved them more so than not. How many garages or workshops in the United States still have a cigar box to hold nails, screws and other flotsam from their projects? Cigar boxes last.

The examples I was drawn to from Robert’s substantial collection are the ones that have the tax labels applied along the side and over the lid. Is there anything sexier than breaking an official seal? I mean really! The samples I share with you today remind me of early 20th century collage. The labels, haphazardly applied compared to the perfection and order of the lid, interfere with and force themselves into the carefully planned cigar box “landscape.” That is what I love the most. The tax labels were never designed to work with the cigar box. They were there to serve an official function—like a price sticker or a bar code on a product today. Besides that, I am reminded of something else—the whole role that cigar bands and box labels did throughout the 20th century to inspire artists. One has only to look at the early collage art of Kurt Schwitters, Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Joseph Cornell and others to see the influences. And most recently, the discovery of the work of Felipe Jesus Consalvos, a self-taught artist who worked in the first half of the 20th century.

Consalvos worked in a cigar factory and apparently had plenty of raw material from his work to use (cigar band papers). Influenced by the boxes themselves, he utilized a similar visual “framing and border” devices he saw everyday at his job. Of course, all of these artists, trained or self-taught, pushed their “cigar box and cigar band” influences much farther. Consalvos used real cut-up dollar bills, magazine photographs, old wedding photos and all kinds of ephemera to create his surreal, fantastic work.

Also, be sure and check out the faux wood grain on some of examples above— a device the surrealists used often.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

16 Collage Artists

(Above) Rai Escale, via here.


(Above) Brody Neuenschwander, here.


(Above) Kurt Schwitters, via here.

Hannah Höch, via here.


(Above) Angela Paez, here.


(Above) Lucas Biazon, via here.


(Above) Mary Daniel Hobson, via here.


(Above) Mark Wagner, via here.


(Above) Nicole Natri, via here.


(Above) Donald Baechler, via here.

(Above) Joseph Cornell, via here.


(Above) Paul Cava, via here.


(Above) Eduardo Recife, via here.


(Above) Hanneke Treffers, via here.

(Above) Barbara Nessim, via here.

(Above) Tony Fitzpatrick, via here.


HERE ARE SOME OF MY FAVORITE COLLAGE ARTISTS. The danger with any list is that one is always going to omit a few greats, but if you like this particular art form, pick an artist you like and learn more. Of course, the big three are Kurt Schwitters, Hannah Höch and Joseph Cornell—and you’ll have no problem finding lots of information on this group.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Brian Dettmer: Book Dissections

Click on any image for larger view.



Click on any image for larger view.



Click on any image for larger view.



BRIAN DETTMER IS AN ARTIST WHO LOOKS AT A BOOK, OR SET OF OBSOLETE BOOKS, as a personal excavation into what lays within. Like an archeologist at work on a historical site, Dettmer carefully exposes one layer at a time while discarding the detritus. And in our 21st century “age of information” Dettmer’s approach to “revealing” information is refreshingly original. I compare Dettmer’s work to that of the great collage and assemblage artist Joseph Cornell (1903 - 1972), who, in his reclusive and private world, created boxes of visual discovery not unlike that of today’s Brian Dettmer.

Brian Dettmer was born in Chicago in 1974 and currently lives and works in Atlanta. He received his BA in Art and Design/Art History from Columbia College. He is currently represented by Packer Schopf in Chicago, Kinz + Tillou Fine Art in New York, Toomey Tourell in San Francisco, and MiTO Gallery in Barcelona. Dettmer’s work has been shown in several museums, universities, and art centers throughout the country, including the International Museum of Surgical Science, the Bellevue Arts Museum, the Rockford Art Museum, the Illinois State Museums in Chicago and Springfield, the Kohler Arts Center, and the Hyde Park Art Center.

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