Flora, James
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Flora, James
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Flora, James
Flora, James 1914-1998
Name Components
Name :
Flora, James 1914-1998
Flora, James (American author and illustrator, 1914-1998)
Name Components
Name :
Flora, James (American author and illustrator, 1914-1998)
Flora, Jim 1914-1998
Name Components
Name :
Flora, Jim 1914-1998
James Flora
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Name :
James Flora
Flora, James Royer 1914-1998
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Name :
Flora, James Royer 1914-1998
Flora, Jim
Name Components
Name :
Flora, Jim
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Biographical History
James Flora was a children's author and illustrator, born in 1914 in Bellefontaine, Ohio, who lived in Rowayton, Connecticut from 1946 until his death in 1997.
James R. Flora was born January 25, 1914, in Bellefontaine, OH, and died in Rowayton, CT, on July 9, 1998. He was a magazine and album cover designer and illustrator, and author and illustrator of children's books. Known for his distinctive artwork, that combines elements of surrealism with cartoonish drawings, Flora is also recognized as one of the first artists to create illustrated covers for record albums. In 1939 Flora formed the Little Man Press with writer Robert Lowry, and together they published books and pamphlets till 1942. That year he began working as an art director and slaes promotion manager for Columbia Records. Eight years later he began his first children's book, The Fabulous Fireworks Family, after receiving encouragement from Margaret McElderry, juvenile editor at Harcourt Brace. It was published in 1955 and was an American Library Association Notable Book. Altogether he wrote and illustrated 17 books for children.
James Royer Flora was a co-founder and co-publisher of Little Man Press (1939-42), an art director and sales promotion manager for Columbia Recording, and began writing children's books (self-illustrated) in 1950. He has worked as an art director for Benwill Publishing Corporation and for Computer Design Publishing Company.
James (Jim) Flora was born 25 January 1914, in Bellefontaine, Ohio, the son of James Bernard (a barber) and Laura (Royer) Flora. He attended Urbana University (1931-1933), the Art Academy of Cincinnati (1934-1939), and Atelier 17 (two years). He co-founded The Little Man Press, a series of letterpress publications, with author Robert Lowry (1919-1994), and provided illustrations and designs for Little Man publications (1939-1942). After graduating from the Art Academy, he began freelancing in Cincinnati. His clients included Procter and Gamble and the Union Central Life Insurance Co.
Flora was hired by the art department of Columbia Records in 1942, and established a reputation for his eccentric and amusing style of caricature, which appeared in Columbia's trade literature and ads. He became the label's art director in 1943, and was later promoted to advertising manager, and then sales promotion manager. He began designing (without credit) album covers for Columbia around 1945. Around 1947 he began a series of idiosyncratically stylized, cartoonish covers (usually signed), which are today considered some of the more dazzling exemplars of the early golden age of album cover design. Some of these works can be viewed here, and dozens were reproduced in a book by Irwin Chusid, entitled The Mischievous Art of Jim Flora ( Fantagraphics Books, 2004).
Flora left Columbia Records in 1950 and moved with his family to Mexico . They lived in the town of Taxco, which provided the inspiration and setting for Flora's first published children's book, The Fabulous Firework Family (1955). After returning from Mexico in 1951, Flora lived in Rowayton, Connecticut, and resumed his career as a freelance illustrator. He returned to album cover design in 1953, this time for RCA Victor, on a series of widely acclaimed assignments jobbed out by RCA art director, Robert M. Jones (who had succeeded Flora as Columbia Records ' art director in 1945).
The success of The Fabulous Firework Family convinced Flora to devote more time to authoring and illustrating children's books. He eventually wrote and drew 17, both for Harcourt Brace and for Atheneum, between 1955 and 1982. Several of these books were later adapted into animated features, for which Flora wrote the scripts. He was a boating enthusiast, and spent a good deal of his time during the 1980s and 1990s painting works with nautical themes, including large, intricate steamship canvases. James Flora passed away in 1998.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/52887643
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n50003576
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n50003576
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q6195005
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
Children's literature
Children's literature
Children's literature
Children's literature, American
Illustrated children's books
Illustrated children's books
Illustrators
Illustrators
Nationalities
Americans
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Authors, American
Authors
Illustrator
Illustrators, American
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Connecticut
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