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Jun 4 8 tweets 3 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
Time I think to look at some of the art nouveau illustrations by J.R. Witzel for Jugend magazine... Image
Josef Rudolf Witzel was an illustrator and painter born in Frankfurt in 1867. He was also one of the pioneers of art nouveau in Germany. Image
Witzel studied art at the Staatliche Hochschule für Bildende Künste in Frankfurt, before moving to Munich in 1890. It was in Munich that J.R. Witzel met Franz Von Stuck and The Secession, a group of artists who stood against official paternalism in art. Image
In 1896 J.R. Witzel began producing cover art for a new publication. Jugend ("Youth") was a German art nouveau magazine founded by Georg Hirth. Witzel's style fitted well with Hirth's idea of "Jugendstil." ImageImage
Josef Witzel contributed illustrations to Jugend up to the start of World War One. After that he worked mostly on commercial poster art. ImageImage
Witzel's illustration style is both intricate and sparing: he uses just enough lines to capture the flow of natural forms. Image
Josef Witzel passed away in Gräfelfing in 1924. By then Art Deco had replaced Art Nouveau in the public taste, but Witzel will always be remembered as one of the fathers of Jugendstil. Image
You can browse Jugend online, thanks to the ever excellent University of Heidelberg archives: digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/jugend Do see what you think.

Bis zum nächsten Mal... Image

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More from @PulpLibrarian

Jun 4
Time once again for my occasional series "Women with great hair fleeing gothic houses!"

Today we visit Germany. This may involve compound nouns... Image
Germany is of course the land of the spooky schloß, but there are many other domiciles that Frauen mit Tollen Haaren can flee from... Image
They can flee a handsome Hanoverian crescent... Image
Read 14 tweets
Jun 3
Pelican Books! It was a university course for the price of a packet of cigarettes: maybe the blend wasn't to everyone's taste, but there's no denying the addictive nature of the range.

Today in pulp I look back at the autodidact's library of choice... ImageImage
In 1937, two years after Allen Lane founded Penguin books, the company decided on a new imprint to provide academic and intellectual non-fiction for the general public. Lane believed there was a market for “intelligent books at a low price” which he was determined to serve. Image
Over its lifetime Pelican sold a quarter of a billion books covering almost 3,000 subjects. Lane apparently came up with the Pelican name when he overheard a woman at King’s Cross railway station mistakenly asking for a Pelican book instead of a Penguin one. Image
Read 14 tweets
Jun 2
Today in pulp I look at the essential ingredients for writing Victorian Scientifiction!

What’s that you say? Well come this way and find out... Image
‘Scientifiction’ was a term coined by publisher Hugo Gernsback in 1915 to describe the kinds of prophetic scientific stories from the Victorian era that his magazines would publish. By the late 1920s the term was abandoned for the more familiar phrase ‘science fiction.’ Image
And Gernsback had a clear idea of what he meant. “By scientifiction I mean the Jules Verne, H.G. Wells and Edgar Allen Poe type of story - a charming romance intermingled with scientific fact and prophetic vision.” Image
Read 16 tweets
May 31
Today in pulp I'm looking at La Vie Parisienne, that naughty French guide to the social and artistic life of Paris... Image
La Vie Parisienne was a magazine with a reputation: During WW1 Belgium banned it, and General Pershing warned American troops against reading its scandalous pages. In truth it wasn't so risqué, but its illustrations were of the highest quality. Image
Printed on excellent paper stock, and employing only the best illustrators, La Vie Parisienne soon became required reading for the upper classes. Both Tsar Nicholas II and King Edward VII were subscribers. ImageImage
Read 15 tweets
May 29
Some artists leave us too young. But they leave behind a wonderful collection of work and a wistful sense of what could have been.

One such artist is Virginia Frances Sterrett (1900-1931). This is her story... Image
Virginia Frances Sterrett was born in Chicago in 1900. From an early age she preferred to draw rather than play with other children. Image
After Sterrett's father died she began to study at the Art Institute of Chicago. Sadly she left in 1916 after her mother became ill. Image
Read 11 tweets
May 27
Out Of The Unknown was BBC2's science fiction anthology series: a set of stand alone teleplays mostly based on short stories by famous SF writers. It ran from 1965 to 1971, but almost half the episodes have been lost.

Today in pulp I look back at this 60's sci-fi classic... Image
Sydney Newman is a legendary figure in British TV drama. He began his career in Canada before moving to the UK in the 1950s to work on ATV’s Armchair Theatre. He was the driving force behind The Avengers, before moving to the BBC in 1962 and launching Doctor Who. ImageImageImage
In 1961 Irene Shubik was working with Newman on Armchair Theatre when she pitched him the idea of a spin-off series focussing on science fiction stories. Newman liked it, and Shubik was paired with Avengers director Leonard White to work up the series. ImageImage
Read 24 tweets

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