Charley Harper essay from Delicious Industries

Ternscape, limited edition giclee print, 465 x 340 mm, £195

Ternscape, limited edition giclee print, 465 x 340 mm, £195

Charley Harper

04.08.1922 – 10.06.2007

“I don’t try to put everything in, I try to leave everything out. I never count the feathers in the wings; I just count the wings.”

Charlie Harper was an American Modernist who developed a distinctive style of illustration that he called Minimal Realism. Harper grew up on his family’s farm in the Appalachian foothills where he built “an affinity for nature that would one day find expression in my designs”.

He began studying at the Art Academy of Cincinnati as a realist painter before being drafted, spending three years in Army Intelligence during the Second World War. Harper continued to sketch, however, and in this very different environment learned how to “grasp the important elements of a scene quickly and put them down with minimum detail.”

After his time in the Army, Harper completed his studies and graduated in 1947. He was awarded the Stephen H Wilder Traveling Scholarship, which enabled he and his wife Edie to travel the West and South of America painting and enjoying nature.

On their return Charley became a tutor at the Art Academy of Cincinnati (where he would stay for 20 years) and also began working in a commercial studio. However, he soon found the latter wasn’t an environment for realism and that all they wanted was illustrations of “happy housewives”.

Increasingly frustrated with the limitations of realism he began to experiment with a new style where he replaced perspective with two-dimensional shapes, reduced to only straight lines and curves. The idea was “…to push simplification as far as possible without losing identification”. This new style combined the ability to caricature and simplify.

“I reduced all lines and edges to straights and curves and began to render with mechanical drawing instruments – ruling pen, compass, French curve, T-square, triangle. I saw forms as hard-edged shapes of flat or textured colour with enough lines added to complete identification. I began to include black and white in every full-colour picture (forbidden in realism); spanning the value scale added sparkle and zip, and all colours seem to me richer in the presence of black and white. I didn’t discard depth, but achieved it by such devices as overlapping shapes and colour and size relationships.”

Harper’s use of pure ink whites rather than unprinted paper is one of the reasons why his prints still appear so vibrant.

“Nature subjects, I found, are ideally suited to this interpretation. Birds and fish in particular have built-in functional beauty imposed by their habitats and require only a little distortion of what’s there already, a thinning of lines and a simpler statement of shape. In perching and walking birds, and some insects, there exists a spatial tension because of the heavy body supported by slender legs that I find satisfying.”

In 1948 Ford Publications commissioned Harper to illustrate the recipe section in the December issue of ‘Ford Times’, Ford Motor Company’s travel magazine. This was the start of a successful collaboration that would last until 1982 and the reason that so many of the wonderful prints we know today exist.

His illustrations proved popular with readers, who often requested copies. So in 1952 the illustrations for a wildlife article, ‘Eight Familiar Fish’ were also offered to readers as a series of screen prints for $5 each. The prints were hand-screen printed by Charley and Edie in their basement – Charley created the stencils whilst Edie mixed the inks.

These limited edition prints were so successful that in June 1953 a second set followed concluding a series of articles named ‘Horseless Carriage Adventures’ and depicting national landmarks. Then in November 1954 a series of bird prints were offered which accompanied the article ‘Feeding Station Birds’.

The bird prints became an annual tradition eventually comprising 73 designs. For each November issue Harper would not only illustrate an article about birds and produce the limited edition prints but would also write it. In total, he illustrated over 90 articles and 30 covers for Ford Times.

Throughout the 50′s and 60′s Harper enjoyed commercial success illustrating the popular cook book, ‘Betty Crocker’s Dinner for Two’ and being commissioned by The Golden Press to illustrate ‘The Golden Book of Biology’ and ‘The Animal Kingdom’, all very sought after publications.

Harper found the greatest pleasure in nature illustration and throughout his career designed many posters for non-profit organisations including Cincinnati Zoo, Cincinnati Nature Center, Hamilton County (Ohio) Park District, the Michigan Audubon Society and the Hawk Mountain Sanctuary in Pennsylvania.

Other notable works include the design of two ceramic tile murals both in Cincinnati; one for the Federal Building, based on American wildlife and one for the new Convention Center, titled ‘Space Walk’. Also two painted murals in Dearborn; one depicting Michigan wildlife in the Ford General Staff Office building cafeteria, and another on ‘transportation around the world’ in the Ford Rotunda.

Charley Harper posters

A keen conservationist, Charley Harper designed over 50 posters for various natural areas, parks, conservation organizations and causes. Each poster celebrates a special part of the natural world. We have a few of these stunning, large format posters as part of the exhibition.

Please note, there is a Charley Harper water mark on a few if the images.
Each of the posters can be exhibition mounted on board for an additional £30. We only have a few of each in stock, so contact us quickly. (01273 773776) Postage and packing for a rolled poster is £6.50.

Charley Harper giclee prints

There are so many beautiful images to choose from. Charley Harper was so prolific and consistently made amazing designs throughout his life.

Much of the original work is no longer available so we also have a number of reproduction prints from the Harper estate, some of which you can see here.

Come and see them in the gallery, or phone us on 01273 773776.

Announcing – Charley Harper at Castor and Pollux

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We are very pleased to announce an exhibition of vintage prints by Charley Harper at Castor and Pollux from 3 July 2010 and throughout the Summer.

The show includes designs made for The Ford Times in the 1950s and ’60 as well as later, limited edition screen prints of his iconic birds and animals.

You can see all the prints that are available here.

There are giclee prints here.

You can see posters here.

For more information about this hugely innovative graphic artist click here.

Charley Harper at Castor and Pollux exhibition online

Original American prints by Charley Harper will be on show at Castor and Pollux from 3 July – 3 September. All of the prints will be sold framed. If you are interested in making purchase please email us at castorandpolluxart@mac.com for an invitation to the private view on July 2nd. There is a great selection, but unfortunately we only have one of each print … first come, first served.

If Charley Harper is new to you, you can read more about him here.

Charley Harper exhibition poster

Charley Harper exhibition poster

A feature of our print exhibitions is the Castor and Pollux exhibition poster. Mr. Harper is no exception. This poster will be available to buy during the show. They are £5 and if you would like us to post one to you, it’s £2 postage and packing. Call us on 01273 773776 if you would like one – or three!

Charley Harper – About the great graphic artist

Charley Harper in his studio 2006

Charley Harper in his studio 2006

Charley Harper has become increasingly well know in the UK, but in America he is a national treasure.

Best know for his bird designs, Charley Harper (1922 – 2007) was an extraordinarily prolific graphic designer and artist, loved for his delightful, stylised, and often humorous illustrations of nature, animals, insects and people.

Harper captured the essence of his subject with the fewest possible elements. This can be seen in the ornithological illustrations for his book, ‘Birds and Words’ (1974), recently republished by Ammo Books.

‘When I look at a wildlife or nature subject, I don’t see the feathers in the wings, I just count the wings. I see exciting shapes, colour combinations, patterns, textures, fascinating behaviour and endless possibilities for making pictures’

Born in West Virginia, Harper’s early life was spent roaming over the Appalachian foothills surrounding the family farm. Although he didn’t know it at the time, he was building an affinity with nature that would greatly influence his work. He left his farm home to study at the Art Academy of Cincinnati, where he later served as an instructor for 20 years.

By 1955, Harper had found his own voice as an artist. Referring to his economical approach as minimal realism he said “I don’t think there was much resistance to the way I simplified things. I think everybody understood that’

In the 1950s and 1960s Harper gained acclaim as a commercial illustrator with ‘The Golden Book of Biology’, ‘Animal Kingdom’, and “Betty Crocker’s Dinner for Two’. In the following two decades, he contributed to The Ford Times, a unique travel magazine from The Ford Motor Company. Harper’s paintings have appeared on posters from many conservation minded organisations and wildlife centres.

New York fashion guru Todd Oldham (‘Charley Harper: An Illustrated Life’ 2007), Harper’s biographer, said of his work ‘Charley’s inspired yet accurate colour sense is undeniable, and when combined with the precision he exacts on rendering only the most important details, one is always left with a sense of awe.’