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On the Train to Glendale (2014) Drawing by Edwin Loftus
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Seller Edwin Loftus
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Original Artwork (One Of A Kind)
Drawing,
Pencil
/
Paper
on Paper
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Dimensions
10x12 in
Dimensions of the work alone, without framing: Height 6in, Width 8in - Framing This artwork is framed (Frame + Under Glass)
- Categories Drawings under $5,000 Illustration History
According to his daughter, Diane, he remembered a mouse he captured and fed in his first studio where he produced, 'Alice in Cartoonland', (a series of shorts mixing photography and animation). He named the mouse, "Mortimer", (a name that would later appear in backup characters in the Floyd Gottfriedsen serialized adventure stories, as an elder uncle and a young child). When he showed his sketches for an adventure with a homemade airplane to his wife, she objected that "Mortimer" sounded too stiff and stuffy and suggested "Mickey" instead.
I once met Walt Disney. I was about four years old and he and I were at Disneyland at the same time, in front of the Cinderella Castle, the first Saturday after the Park's Grand Opening. So, the hand that drew this imaginary reconstruction once shook the hand that first drew Mickey Mouse.
While in Adventureland, my mother bought me a blow-mold stegosaurus toy and a few weeks later I got the idea to use it as a model for a drawing of a stegosaurus. This was my first drawing from "life" and I noticed that the reptile's legs didn't hang from its underside, but gradually emerged from the body beginning a little below halfway between its back and its belly, and my drawing ability improved a thousand percent.
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Edwin Loftus is an American painter and draftsman born in 1951. His interest in art began at the age of 4 when he decided to draw something real rather than working from his imagination.
As a child he excelled at drawing and as a teenager he began to experiment with oil painting. In college, he took courses in art and art history and realized that true art had nothing to do with the quality of the drawing or painting, but that it had to have the ambition to push the boundaries and expand the visual experience.
He also studied philosophy, psychology and history and quickly realized that it was just another art establishment trying to defend its elitist industry and reward system. Their skills were almost non-existent, they knew nothing about psychology, perception or stimulus response, and they were extensions of the belief system that made communism, fascism and other forms of totalitarianism such destructive forces in the world. They literally believe that art shouldn't be available to ordinary human beings, but only to an elite "sophisticated" enough to understand it.
Edwin Loftus realized that the emperors of art had no clothes, but they were still the emperors. Gifted in art, he worked hard to acquire this skill. So he found other ways to make a living and sold a few artworks from time to time. For sixty years, many people enjoyed his works and some collected them.
Today, Edwin Loftus is retired. Even if he sold all his paintings for the price he asked, "artist" would be the lowest paid job he ever had... but that's the way it is. It won't matter to him after he dies. He just hopes that some people will like what he does enough to enjoy it in the future.
- Nationality: UNITED STATES
- Date of birth : 1951
- Artistic domains: Works by artists with a certified artist value,
- Groups: Certified Artists Contemporary American Artists