One of the satisfying elements of writing the Holling blog is that mysteries present themselves and, often, they’re solved. I received a letter this month asking about an 11 x 14” picture — originally rendered in ink and colored charcoal or pastels — in an old frame that was discarded in Florida. The only identification was the imprint “Mountain View” and the publisher “Platt & Munk.”
Also in the museum’s collection is a box of six Indian jigsaw puzzles and a box of six Cowboy puzzles. Same identification of publisher and illustrator on the box. If the mystery art is not from the puzzles or the book, perhaps this is an outtake — a piece Holling produced but was sold singly by P&M. Joan Hoffman states, “The publisher was within its right [to publish the art], but profited more than the Hollings did…in these examples and their other work.”
So, art detectives, keep your eyes peeled! Someday we may have a definitive catalogue raisonné of all the commercial art that Holling and his wife, Lucille, produced.
A comparison of the mystery art (right) with similar Holling technique in rendering landscape and trees. |
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