Jennie Feldman, The Grey Bird

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No bright rhyme for this backward glare,
the oboe-squawk half throttled
with hindsight’s effort.
Barely, acrobatically, hanging on.
Is it in the way fear squiggles
a frown and overdoes the eye’s
black brow that we glimpse relief?
Gravity resisted against the odds
the Morbids, poor sight, perennial
Demon seizures (x’s in diaries).
Shades of grey. As if pigeon-haunted
no bird more beautiful — rinsed
to a bluesy defencelessness. But

(Oh! W! X! Y! Z!
Did it never come into your head
That our lives must be lived elsewhere)

even a lifetime’s habit of flight
— inward & out & south & east —
the rollicking tales and painted lands
will not fully translate the cry: I am
mortissimo in body & soul…

Yet
seeing out the moment: headspun words
& feathered lines; no more fervent flying.

Jennie Feldman, Three Birds from a seires of imaginary birds by Edward Lear.
PN Review 206, Volume 38 Number 6, July – August 2012.

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Jennie Feldman, The Black and White Bird

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Lifted birdily out of the sober
quirks of sadness, not to be weighed down.
Forget the palette, the easel-hours stuck
sitting like a petrified gorilla

here’s quick strokes, dark washes.
Poised ambiguities: landing /
taking off? One bright eye unfailing
dares an old man’s

wingsprung bespectacled
spherical & bearded
comic-poetical self to find
grace in the fine uncertainties.

Jennie Feldman, Three Birds from a seires of imaginary birds by Edward Lear.
PN Review 206, Volume 38 Number 6, July – August 2012.

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Jennie Feldman, The Pink Bird

pinkbird

How to get a grip – scant-toed
chick number twenty-one
at Bowman’s Lodge (Holloway),
dislodged unfledged pink
& clueless – sixty-odd years on?

Eye skyward, whence come
fantastical figments
marvellous skews that fly
thin air against our limits.
Flap-flap absolomly alone

but chirping – to every passing
aloneness – larky fables
to take us in. Look: There is
no more trouble ahead
Sorrow or any such thing.

Jennie Feldman, Three Birds from a seires of imaginary birds by Edward Lear.
PN Review 206, Volume 38 Number 6, July – August 2012.

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Edward Lear’s Indian Trees

For sale from Donald A. Heald.

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Indian Trees, Palms and Bamboos [cover title of an album of 19 original watercolours mostly of Indian landscape by Edward Lear]

San Remo, Italy: 1878-1882. Folio. (19 x 12 inches). 19 original watercolour drawings (1 of a Jay, 18 depicting various species of Indian, Sri Lankan and Egyptian trees within landscape settings in Shimla, Ratnapura, Kozhikode, Delhi and elsewhere, each after sketches by Lear accomplished between 1854-1874), each on drawing paper and mounted onto larger sheets of the album. (Some toning to the drawings from prior arch-topped passe-partout mounts).

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Early elaborate red morocco gilt album, covers with inset marbled paper panels, contemporary red morocco lettering-pieces on upper cover and spine

Lear composed these fine watercolours on a trip to India at the behest of Lear’s friend Lord Northbrook, Viceroy of India, who supplied him £1,000 of commissions. In 1872, Lear’s first attempt to reach the subcontinent was abandoned at Egypt due to ill health, but he tried again the following year. “Lear was in his sixty-second year when he arrived in India on 22 November 1873. He remained there until 11 January, 1875 and was travelling more or less continually … Lear’s tour of India was the last of his great expeditions … He died at San Remo on 29 January 1888, after he had finished his projected oils and water colors of India …” (Edward Lear’s Indian Journal, Edited by Ray Murphy, Introduction, pp. 34-36).

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“Lear’s trip to India from 1873 to 1875, his last extended journey, made him one of the most notable British artists to visit the subcontinent during the Victorian era” (Dehejia, p. xii). In India, Lear produced thousands of rough sketches on small sheets (referred to by him as “scraps”) and a smaller number of larger more finished drawings. Of the latter, some were accomplished in India, particularly, as his journal reveals, on rainy days when he was otherwise prevented from drawing outdoors, and others were reworked in the years following his return to San Remo, which are identifiable by their additional dates. The present album is principally comprised of the more finished, larger drawings dating shortly after his return to Italy.

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Unlike other artists in India in this period, Lear focussed his work nearly entirely on Indian landscape and not on its architectural monuments. The present album, collected at an early date evidently for its botanical and dendrological content, is representative of his work in the sub-continent, breathtaking majestic mountains vistas and the exotic vegetation of tropical scenery. “Lear described himself as a ‘painter of poetical topography’ and a friend called him a ‘painter of topographical poetry.’ … Behind each choice of subject, each drawn line, each wash of colour, we can feel the personal stamp of the amiable, eccentric, and intelligent observer of a wondrous exotic land. The painter and poet were one and the same man” (Dehejia, pp. 111-112).

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The watercolors present here are comprised as follows (titled as per Lear’s captions in the image, the type of tree depicted from later pencil caption on the mount below the image, and with quotes from Lear’s Indian Journal relating to the scenes depicted):

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1) [Small bird on a branch with an insect flying nearby]. Signed and dated Sept. 1867. 10 3/8 x 6 1/2 inches.

2) “Simla. 1874.” Signed and dated 1878. 15 1/2 x 9 3/4 inches. Rhododendron arboreum. 20 April 1874: “The rhododendra are now 100 times more beautiful than 10 days ago, one mass of ineffable colour. The hills, looking south, are particularly beautiful this evening, being all minus their sharp detail, owing to the haze: and the scarlet flowers come off the vast, dim gray distance like nothing one ever saw or imagined. And it must be owned that the natives of these parts are by far the most picturesque of any I have yet seen, especially the womenkind in their floating mantels, many-coloured trousers and vests and surprising nose rings…”

3) “Negadeh [Egypt]. Feby. 24, 1854.” Signed and dated Feb. 1 1882. 15 3/8 x 9 3/4 inches. Date palm.

4) “Ratnapura. 1874”. Signed and dated 1878. 15 3/8 x 9 3/4 inches. Areca palm. 24 November 1874: “After tea, walk out but a thick mist covers everything beyond what is close to the eye. Drew on the banks of the Kalaganga, beautful bamboo and palmy scenery but no more…”

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5) “Calicut. 1874.” Signed and dated 1878. 15 3/8 x 9 3/4 inches. Talipot palm. 16 October 1874: “It was, I think, past 4 when, at the end of the grandest tree bordered roads I ever saw, we reached Calicut station. Roads of such redundant beauty one could hardly dream of! India, Indianissimo! Every foot was a picture…”

6) “Dinapor. 1874.” Signed and dated 1878. 15 1/2 x 9 7/8 inches. Palmyra palm. 17 December 1873: “Walked out a bit, hardly knowing what to do. Then resolved to go in a garry to near Dinapore and walk back. So set off to the beginning of the suburban town, and there made a tolerable drawing of big palmyra palms, and the fine plain, a subject quite makeable into a picture.”

7) “Ceylon. 1874.” Signed and dated 1878. 15 3/8 x 9 3/4 inches. Sago palm. 16 November 1874: “Extraordinarily lovely view! Drew three times; what profound depths of green foliage. The vast amount of varied and definite vegetation here is simply amazing, beyond all or any imitation … Flowers, trees, colours, indescribable.”

8) “Mahatta [Egypt]. Feby. 8, 1854.” Signed and dated Feb. 7, 1882. 15 3/8 x 9 3/4 inches. Doum palm.

9) “Barrackpore. 1874.” Signed and dated 1878. 15 3/8 x 9 3/4 inches. Plaintain. 31 December 1873: “The reflections in the water may, and should be perfect, but were not so, because of disturbing washers … Remarked the beauty of white sheets, both in light and shadow; also black bodies and white waist cloths; also, extreme featheriness of coconut palm; depths of brown gray shade; brilliancy of bananas, and general misty grayness…”

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10) “Hurdwar. April 4, 1874. Signed and dated 1878. 15 1/2 x 9 3/4 inches. Banyan tree. 5 April 1874: “Then the variety of costumes, new every moment; some of the yogis like painted North American Indians. The great multitude of bathers is vastly queer! The colours of dresses amazing, women in apricot coloured shawls, rose coloured, scarlet, brown … The mountains came out comparatively clear before lunch, so that I could really get an outline of the upper range, snows and all.”

11) “Below Kersiong. 1874.” Signed and dated 1878. 15 1/2 x 9 3/4 inches. Screw pine. 28 January 1874: “The variety and beauty of the foliage above, below and around this descent road is wondrous! And of the weather prove fine, I can’t help thinking of going up to the screwpines tomorrow … to draw my last inspiration from the soon-never-to-be-seen-anymore woods of the eastern Himalayas.”

12) “Hurdwar. April 4, 1874. Signed and dated 1878. 15 1/2 x 9 3/4 inches. Mango tree. 4 April 1874: “Then we drove to near Jehallipur, and I was set down to draw my temple and mango grove with policemen to watch that no harm betided me!”

13) “Galle, Celyon. Nov. 1874.” Signed and dated 1878. 15 1/2 x 9 3/4 inches. Breadfruit tree. 17 November 1874: “Endless beauty of coconut roads, still water and seashore; some scattered roadside villages, and every now and then long, pale blue waves, foam and silvery sand. Reached Belligam, a clean Resthouse in a compound where vast breadfuit trees congregate…”

14) “Simla. April 20, 1874. Signed and dated 1878. 15 1/2 x 9 3/4 inches. Deodar cedar. 20 April 1874: “Began to pen out cedars … The hills, looking south, are particularly beautiful this evening, being all minus their sharp detail, owing to the haze…”

15) “Calcutta. 1874.” Signed and dated 1878. 15 1/2 x 9 3/4 inches. Bamboo. 1 January 1874: “Botanical gardens flat and nowise beautiful, except for the many good trees. Immense banyan tree. Drew vast bamboo till 11…”

16) “Tellichery. October 1874.” Signed and dated 1878. 15 3/8 x 9 3/4 inches. Traveller’s tree. 22 October 1874: “The plentitude of palmery here is over whelming! Those deep grey-green misty hollows full of endless vistas and series fo palm leaves and stems! Came Mr. Barrow, Superintendent of Schools, who took me and Giorgia to see the Traveller’s Friend – a wonderful sort of tree; a kind of plaintain, but growing queerly enough in a single fan, or peacock’s tail out of one stem only – 26 leaves in all … Altogether the tree seemed alquanto miraculous.”

17) “Delhi. 14 March 1874.” Signed and dated 1878. 15 3/8 x 9 3/4 inches. Babul tree. 13 March 1874: “In the garden are some good trees, very like walnut, … the noise from the multitude of pigeons here is wondrous, and parrots abound…”

18) “Darjeeling. 1874.” Signed and dated 1878. 15 3/8 x 9 3/4 inches. Tree fern. 17 January 1874: “Wonderful, wonderful view of Kinchinjunga … Set off with Giorgio, down as far as where some tree ferns grow, also magnificent groups of trees; but all were more or less in gray mist till 3, when Kinchinjunga began to appear again and grew continually more and more lovely.”

19) “Narkanda. 30 April 1874.” Signature and date faded. 15 3/8 x 9 3/4 inches. Pine trees. 30 April 1874: “Although these Himalyan pines are brighter and more cheerful than those of Switzerland, they are just as monotonous in form…’

Cf. Ray Murphy, editor. Edward Lear’s Indian Journal. (New York, 1954); Vidya Dehejia, Impossible Picturesqueness: Edward Lear’s Indian Watercolours, 1873-1875 (New York, 1989).

See previous post on the same album.

While working on this series Edward Lear probably asked for assistence from Sir Joseph Hooker, director of the Kew Botanic Gardens, see a letter to the scientist of 1878 published in part on the Kew website.

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Edward Lear at 73½

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Edward Lear. aet. 72.½
His cat Foss, aet 16.

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There was an Old Man with a Book

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Edward Lear in 1884

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Edward Lear: Letter to Lord Lindsay

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3 November.
My dear Lord Lindsay,
I have but a very few moments to thank you for a most kind letter & for the Cheque for 5£ it Contains. I shall like to hear that you & Lady Lindsay are pleased with the book.
Yes:  Knowsley is indeed changed since I first went there in 1832: — but it seems to me that perhaps yet greater changes are ahead.
Believe me,
My dear Lord
yours sincerely,
Edward Lear.

The letter is for sale here. The seller’s description:

An autograph letter in which Lear writes to the art historian Alexander William Crawford Lindsay (1812-1880) on the R J Bush letterhead.

After thanking Lord Lindsay for his ‘kind letter’ and expressing the hope that he and his wife are pleased with ‘the book’, Lear goes on to make the enigmatic reference, ‘Yes: Knowsley is indeed changed since I first went there in 1832 : – but it seems to me that perhaps yet greater changes are ahead’.

HISTORICAL CONTEXT: Lear’s use of R J Bush’s letterhead places the letter sometime between 1870 and circa 1877 – this being the time Bush was acting as his publisher. In addition, Lord Lindsay travelled extensively in Mediterranean Europe studying and collecting art which would suggest that the book referred to is Lear’s ‘Journal of a Landscape Painter in Corsica’. This in turn would date the letter specifically to 1870, this being the year in which it was published.

This date possibly helps shed some light on Lear’s mysterious comment about Knowsley Hall that ‘it seems to me that perhaps yet greater changes are ahead’. The death of the fourteenth Earl of Derby in October 1869 saw his son Edward Henry Stanley accede to the title. The two contrasted sharply with each other. The longest serving leader of the Conservative Party and three times Prime Minister, the fourteenth Earl had envisaged that his son would follow closely in his footsteps. However, although Edward Henry Stanley did serve under Disraeli, he failed to share the political sensibilities of his father with his sympathies laying far more with the Liberals with whom he would go on to align himself explicitly in later life. Given Lear’s familiarity with the family, it seems likely that this was possibly the ‘greater change’ to which he was referring.

[Personally, I think the “greater chages” refers to Knowsley Hall as a menagerie, as the new Lord Derby did not share his father’s interest in zoology.]

The Stanley family had played a major role in the development of Lear’s career. Lear first went to Knowsley Hall in 1832 when he was engaged by the Thirteenth Earl (Lord Stanley) to draw the animals in his extensive menagerie (one of the largest private Zoological gardens in Europe) and it was whilst here that Lear began writing limericks for his patron’s grandchildren – limericks that would later be published in his ‘A Book of Nonsense’ in 1846 along with his ‘Gleanings from the Menagerie and Aviary at Knowsley Hall’. Lear’s books of nonsense verse and limericks quickly gained a high profile in Victorian society and Ruskin even stated that Lear was one of his favourite authors. At the same time the rumour emerged that the real author of the books was Lord Stanley and that ‘Lear’ was simply a pseudonym derived from Lord Stanley’s title ‘EARL of Derby’. Lear later related how he had felt compelled to intervene when he overheard people discussing this theory on a train from London to Guildford, producing the name tag in his handkerchief, hat and coat pocket as proof that he really did exist (Ref: Preface to the 1872 edition of ‘More Nonsense’ – E Lear).

Although the focus is often on his nonsense verse, it is worth emphasising that Lear was also a highly regarded artist of the time and even gave drawing lessons to Queen Victoria. In this vein, the recipient of the letter is Lord Lindsay (Alexander William Crawford Lindsay – 25th Earl of Crawford and 8th Earl of Balcarres (1812-1880)). Lindsay was a well known art historian with a particular focus on religious art and an early champion of the Italian Primitives (precursors to the aesthetics of the Pre-Raphaelites). He was also bother-in-law to Sir Coutts Lindsay who would go on to found the Grosvenor Gallery with his wife in order to provide an alternative venue to the Royal Academy for the display of the works of the Pre-Raphaelites and which would subsequently become a focus for the Aesthetic Movement.

DETAILED CONDITION REPORT : 20.5cm x 13.3cm. 4pp with integral blank leaf. Mailing folds. Small semicircular stain circa 7mm diameter at the top and bottom edge of the vertical fold. Small (1mm) spot in bottom left corne.

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Wild Lives

cotsen-wild-lives

This program is sponsored by the Cotsen Children’s Library, the Graphic Arts Collection, and the Friends of the Princeton University Library. No reservations are necessary but for more information, contact Ian Dooley at 609-258-1148 or idooley@princeton.edu

Princeton University’s Graphic Arts Collection blog.

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After Edward Lear

Group of three drawings with limericks, c1880. All in pen and ink, annotated either “5”, “10” or “11” in pencil in upper right corner, 18.7 x 26.7cm (paper). Stains, foxing and soiling overall, tears to edges, portions of paper corroded by ink, old vertical folds, tape verso. (Josef Lebovic Gallery).

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There was an old maid of Malines, who wore such a huge Crinoline,
That on one windy day, she was blown right away,
And was never more heard of or seen.

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There was an old Person of Brussels, who went out in a boat to catch mussels;
But a monstrous big shark, who was out for a lark,
Gobbled up this old Person of Brussels.

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There was An old Lady Of Yarrow, who always drove out in a barrow;
The barrow was small, which caused her to fall,
And spilled that old Lady of Yarrow.

I have put up a new book of limericks at nonsenselit.org: The Original Fifteen Gentlemen, Fathers of All Books of Nonsense, Dug Up and Reclothed after Living in the Dust for Forty Years. Published by Frederick Arnold, London, n.d. [probaly around 1865].

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