An
artist for the ages, Franklin Booth, born 1874, was a product of his time.
Isolated on an Indiana farm and determined to be an artist, he studied what
he saw on the pages of Scribner's, Harpers and the other illustrated
magazines of the day. What he saw, and what there was to see, were
wood-engraved images. Photographic reproduction was in its infancy and was
used primarily for halftones of paintings. After all, everyone knew how to
reproduce pen & ink work: you engraved it on wood.
Booth,
not knowing that the line and even the "feel" of the image was a product of
the engraver, copied what he saw using pen on paper. By the turn of the
century, when Booth was embarking on his incredible career, the technology
had advanced enough so that his pen work could be reproduced as he crafted
it. His style was an amazing amalgam of antique appeal and awesome artistry.
Soaring, majestic scenes were crafted with thousands of lines, each placed
in the precise position with respect to its neighbor to provide just the
right density and shade.
His drawings were literally awash in ink
lines, yet they maintain an openness that seems impossibly contradictory.
Witness The New House at left, originally an illustration for a poem
in Good Housekeeping and reproduced in both The Indiana Home
and Franklin Booth: 60 Drawings. In the original, the newly framed
house sits clearly upon the knoll seen between the trees, yet the fine lines
that delineate the clouds can be seen though the open rafters. The control
Booth was able to wield and the clarity he generated with his unique
approach was, hell, it still is, unmistakably the work of a genius.
(We've often seen Booth's work likened to old
steel engravings, but being familiar with both wood and steel engraved
images, I think it is extremely unlikely that his style is descendant from
the latter.)
"It
is his sincerity, this belief in himself and in the integrity of his
commission, that has kept his work on so high a plane. Designs by him made
for advertising purposes are sought by collectors with the same eagerness
as designs for less material purposes, for they have the same quality.
"Mr. Booth possesses to a rare degree the
power of expressing in design or picture an idea, an abstract conception.
He illustrates not so much things as thoughts.
"He is much sought after by advertisers and
art directors because his peculiar and individual style is successfully
practiced by no one else. His imitators are many. They copy his technique,
but they lack his inspiration.
"His two great qualities are his dexterity
with his pen and his imagination. His work appeals to the spirit. It has
an uplifting effect. It suggests something just beyond, an ideal almost
realized. His fine craftsmanship never becomes mere dexterity. It remains
always, as it should be, the instrument for expressing a fine creative
imagination."
Ernest Elmo Calkins
(from the Appreciation to Franklin Booth: 60 Drawings)
The image of worshipers in the church above
could just as easily have been an illustration for a devotional poem or an
Estey Organ advertisement. To Booth's sensibilities, both were of equal
merit and deserved the same effort.
Booth's
artistry and appeal influenced artists throughout the century. His style was
slavishly imitated and copied during his career.
Roy
Krenkel unashamedly dedicated drawings to Booth and drew upon his work
for inspiration. Berni Wrightson's Frankenstein is an unabashed paean
to the man and the style. Artists and art fans alike are still enthralled
with his art today. We used some Booth images on the cover of our Catalog
#15 and sold three or four copies of Franklin Booth: 60 Drawings, in
the $350-$450 range. The universal appeal of the style is interesting. The
"old-time" feeling that hearkens back to the wood-engraved images of the
19th century really doesn't explain why modern art students are so taken
with the approach. I think that what attracted interest then and now is the
talent and compositional skills that were conspicuously absent in his
contemporary mimics. These compositional abilities are even more amazing
when one learns that Booth crafted his images a section at a time,
painstakingly detailing a portion in ink that he had carefully penciled. He
would complete a section in ink before applying the pencil to another part
of the drawing. The innumerable strokes of the pen were prone to cause
smudging if he were to have fully penciled the entire piece, so this
piecemeal approach was his norm. To create and maintain a consistent and
regular pattern and density of lines using this method must have been
exceedingly difficult, yet he seems to have carried it off with aplomb..
Even
his occasional color work carried the lofty, soaring feel of immense
vertical space. The perfect vehicle was The Flying
Islands of the Night,
a fantasy play in verse by James Whitcomb Riley. 16 tipped-in color plates
all feature spacious vistas extending in strong vertical compositions:
whether the subject matter was high-flying fantasy (at right) or a more
earth-bound figure (at left), the canvas extended upward following the
natural shape of the book, creating a sense of majesty and power and awe. It
was the perfect approach for an assignment that could have easily
degenerated into maudlin sentimentality and perfunctory, standard
"fantastic" images. Booth's work literally makes the book. It's
unlikely that this minor romance by Riley would be known today if not for
Booth's dynamic and appealing artwork.
In
a career spanning the first third of the century, we find his work as early
as 1907 in Scribners illustrating the poem, A Deserted Village
(at left). All the hallmarks that were to define his art are already
present: the decorative border, the majestic gnarled trees, the classic hand
lettering and the scroll that was to eventually frame his distinctive
signature. Commissions, both editorial and commercial followed from all of
the prominent magazines. His work can be found in Harpers, Century,
Everybody's, McClure's, Cosmopolitan, Redbook, Good Housekeeping, House &
Garden, Ladies Home Journal and more. By the early 1930's, the changing
fashion of publishing and advertising seems to have gone elsewhere for their
images.
Fortunately there are those of us who keep
his memory alive and an ever-renewing legion of new fans to discover and
marvel at his talent.
In a puzzling aside, we must mention that the
60 Drawings book was reprinted in 1978 by Nostalgia Press as The
Art of Franklin Booth. For some unfathomable reason that defies all book
selling logic, this modern reprint is harder to find than the 1925 original.
Since 1990, when we started keeping computer records of books sold, we've
had 23 copies of 60 Drawings and 13 of The Art of... If anyone
can explain the logic in this, we'd love to hear it. |