Showing posts with label James Lewicki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Lewicki. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Lisa and Elizabeth's Excellent Adventure/Long Island



In the early 1950's the artist  James Lewicki decided to build a house on the north shore of Long Island. I've written about him before. Anyway, his daughter Lisa and I have the house in Centerport in common...not to mention the woods.
Yesterday Lisa said that there was a new trail in the woods surveyed (sort of) by the Boy Scouts.


We set off behind the Suydam House all neatly painted and tended....


into the woods


where we discovered tree-strangling vines


ferns, dead leaves


vines as thick as a python strangling you


moss


a lovely bed of lily of the valley (was there a cottage here once?)


and signs of a bulldozer.


Then we came upon a gorge with mud and sticks and all the sorts of things you would expect


and branches fallen, and no way to get across.


The stream led from Greenlawn to the twin ponds but in all our combined years living there we'd never forded it.


How deep was the mud? How steep the banks? No boots of course but cameras and bags.


We decide to clamber over it anyway


and eventually come to the pond.

to be continued



Monday, November 14, 2011

James Lewicki


In 1990 we bought the wonderful house in Centerport, Long Island built by the artist, James Lewicki. In the process we became friends with his widow Lillian and daughter Lisa.


Lil died last year. Jim, from all the family say, was quite a character, a prolific artist probably best known for his illustrations for Life magazine.  Last weekend Lisa was selling some of his remaining  paintings. This one, probably from the 1930's, reminds me a lot of the work of Charles Burchfield



Not a very good photo of a photo of Jim and Lisa in the studio where Robert later worked.



Industrial landscape that manages to be arresting


My favorite --washing hanging outdoors.


Jim also had a long association with American Greetings cards. He would do a selection of watercolors and the company would choose which ones to publish. A sketch above. More in an old post here


A sketch on the left and the finished product on the right.


Hard to see these clearly --Then and Now ( except "now" is now fifty years ago!) Very charming and retro. 

For lots more information about the paintings and cards (some of which are available in reproduction) contact Lisa at  lisa_hermanson@verizon.net