Showing posts with label Heinrich Kley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heinrich Kley. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

The Lost Art of Heinrich Kley

By guest author Joe Procopio
Publisher, Lost Art Books


If you’ve encountered Heinrich Kley’s work, it has undoubtedly left an impression. Nobody mistakes a Kley drawing for that of another artist’s, and his fervent, humorous line work has inspired generations of animators, illustrators, and cartoonists around the world since originally appearing in German books and periodicals a century ago.

KLEY_338_TI blog

Born in Karlsruhe in 1863 to a silversmith, Kley knew from a young age that he wanted to be an artist, and though his early education adeptly prepared him for that life, it wasn’t until Kley was nearly 40 years old that he began to publish the drawings that would cement his legacy as one of the greatest draftsman of his day. Much of Kley’s early career was spent trying to establish a niche for himself as a painter of landscapes and industrial settings.

KLEY_446_TI blog

That changed when a visiting friend happened upon some drawings in Kley’s studio that he had produced for his wife’s amusement, and he urged Kley to submit them to Jugend, Simplicissimus, and other popular weeklies.

KLEY_233_TI blog

Enthusiastically received, Kley’s work would appear in these magazines on and off for the rest of his life. In fact, the drawings were popular enough that, over the years, the magazine’s publishers collected them into four separate “albums” (large hardcover volumes).

It was almost certainly one of these albums that made its way into the hands of Walt Disney and his famous coterie of early animators, with Albert Hurter (1883-1942), Joe Grant (1908-2005), and Gustaf Tenggren (1896-1970) all expressing deep admiration for Kley’s work.

KLEY_122_TI blog

In fact, Disney himself held up a book of Kley’s drawings during a television appearance and said that they were integral to the studio’s lessons and workshops for newly hired animators.

KLEY_116_TI blog

Even casual perusal shows Kley’s stamp on movies like Fantasia, Dumbo, and The Jungle Book.

KLEY_67_TI blog

The fanciful, sometimes edgy subject matter of Kley’s drawings in combination with a paucity of biographical information led to wild speculations regarding the artist and his life. One American magazine, which ran several of his drawings in the 1930s without Kley’s knowledge or consent, proclaimed that he had died years earlier in an insane asylum.

KLEY_311_TI blog

The reality, however, was quite a bit more prosaic. Kley actually lived a mostly quiet, urbane life until his passing in 1945. The Dionysian excesses of some of his drawings do not seem to be matched by a bohemian personal life.

KLEY_205_TI blog

But outward appearances aside, there is no denying that the images which flowed from Kley’s pen offer a glimpse into a fantastic, often riotous inner life that has thrilled and delighted his admirers for decades.

KLEY_201_TI blog

Surprisingly, for an artist so influential and esteemed, there has not been a new U.S. edition devoted to Kley’s work in 50 years. Such an oversight demanded redress, inspiring me to undertake what turned into a several year quest to gather as much previously uncollected Kley material as I could find and present between two covers. An abundance of wonderful discoveries later, and two covers turned into four.

The Lost Art of Heinrich Kley Volumes 1 & 2 collect over 450 drawings and paintings from a wide array of sources.

KLEY_Books

Neither volume significantly overlaps with past books on Kley, as most of these drawings have not been collected or reprinted since their original publication a century or more ago. Both volumes provide groundbreaking scholarship on Kley’s life and work by German art historian Alexander Kunkel—whose recent research is presented in these volumes for the first time in English—along with incisive appreciations by contemporary artists Michael Wm. Kaluta and Jesse Hamm.

Volume 1 focuses on Kley’s ink drawings and reprints for the first time a substantial selection of his illustration work for children’s books and adult genre fiction, a side of Kley’s career previously unexplored in other collections.

Kley_V1

This volume also includes a wide sampling of Kley’s cartoons and magazine work, with newly collected examples taken directly from a variety of rare sources, such as Jugend, Simplicissimus, and the historic Der Orchideengarten (the world’s first fantasy fiction magazine). In all, over 300 Kley illustrations and cartoons fill this first volume.

Volume 2 also breaks new ground by being the first book to present a large number of Kley’s paintings and preparatory drawings, some reproduced directly from the original art.

Kley_V2

These color works reveal a heretofore rarely glimpsed side to Kley’s talents and expand on the subject matter traditionally associated with the artist by including examples of his landscapes and industrial paintings. This volume’s preparatory drawings are culled from the untapped Kley archive of the Library of Congress and show the artist working out concepts for book illustrations, reworking ink drawings into color paintings, and doodling for his own amusement. Approximately 150 drawings, many in color, appear in this volume.

So what is it that has made Kley’s art so enduring? As Michael Wm. Kaluta so aptly puts it in the foreword to Volume 1: “Like all great things, Kley’s work gives more than one can take. The further one delves into, learns from, studies, abandons, argues with, capitulates to, embraces, and honors his work, the more one feels justified in paying even closer attention to it.”

Joe Procopio
Publisher, Lost Art Books


Lost Art Books, the flagship series from Picture This Press, collects and preserves the works of illustrators and cartoonists from the first half of the 20th century. Too many of these artists have gone underappreciated for too long, with much of their work uncollected or unexamined for decades, if at all. The Lost Art Books series aims to preserve this cultural heritage by re-introducing these artists to new generations of working illustrators, historians, and admirers of things beautiful.