
Tag: Art
Madame Chocquet Reading — Pierre-Auguste Renoir

Hunting Birds at Night — Jean-Francois Millet

February — Michael Sowa

The Unborn Fetus: Who Will Play Sancho Panza to Its Don Quixote? — Mahendra Singh

An image from Mahendra Singh’s strange and wonderful and as-yet-unfinished volume The Dream Book of Mr Pyridine,
See more of Singh’s work at his site; read his interview with Biblioklept.
Portrait of Rodo Reading — Camille Pissarro

Robert Downey Sr. Shares Screenwriting Advice; Picks Out Some Films
Karel Franta’s Marvelous Fairy Tale Illustrations

My mother dropped off several boxes of books, comics, and papers I hadn’t delved into in probably 20 years—stuff I’d left at my parents’ house, intending to retrieve at some point. One book I reacquired was a Czechoslovakian folk and fairy tale collection with the nondescript name Animal Fairy Stories (retold by Alena Benesova and translated into English by Ruth Shepherd), a volume collecting over a hundred stories from all over the globe.
These stories had a tremendous impact on me as a child. Most describe a time “when the world was still young and everything was very different,” an amorphous, shifting world full of tricksters and their dupes, kings always precariously poised to fall and fail, interspecies cohabitation, and lots and lots of death. As important as these stories were in forming my reading habits and taste, the book’s illustrations by Czech artist Karel Franta had an even more profound and unsettling impact on my imagination. His strange, marvelous paintings somehow imprinted on my psyche, mixing in with the horror and joy and fascination that all those early stories entailed. Reading over a dozen animal tales with my own children last night, I was taken aback at how precisely each of Franta’s illustrations was etched into my brain, and how each image burned with its own special humor or terror or confusion or weird delight.
Below are a few of his paintings; I’ve tried to share a sampling that showcases his mix of strange pathos, unsettling humor, and dreamworld evocation.









Wonder Woman — Jaime Hernandez
The Sick Girl — Michael Ancher

Max Ernst — Frederick Sommer

The Sin — Franz Stuck

By the Sea — Charlie Chaplin
Györgi Ligeti’s “Continuum for Harpsichord”
Indian City — Winsor McCay

A Philosopher — Tintoretto

Venus on a Dolphin — Albrecht Dürer

