The Lotus Eater: a glamour portrait after Alberto Vargas (2010) Printmaking by Wilf Tilley

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Sold by Wilf Tilley

  • Original Artwork (One Of A Kind) Printmaking, Digital Print on Canvas
  • Dimensions Height 23.6in, Width 15.8in
  • Artwork's condition The artwork is in perfect condition
  • Framing This artwork is not framed
  • Categories Figurative Erotic Nudes
After winning The Most Beautiful Girl in New York City Competition in 1914, Olive Thomas (1894-1920) was hired for the Ziegfeld Follies and the risqué Midnight Frolic Show. Vargas’ picture was painted after her death in 1920, and his title is a reference to the land of the lotus eaters in Odyssey, Bk. IX. There is much online about this early, glamour[...]
After winning The Most Beautiful Girl in New York City Competition in 1914, Olive Thomas (1894-1920) was hired for the Ziegfeld Follies and the risqué Midnight Frolic Show. Vargas’ picture was painted after her death in 1920, and his title is a reference to the land of the lotus eaters in Odyssey, Bk. IX. There is much online about this early, glamour model and silent movie actress who died under tragic circumstances of nephritis due mercuric chloride poisoning. Thematically, the work relates to another work by Wilf Tilley, The Saddest Portrait, of Hisako Ichiyo (1904-1920), a performer with the Tokyo Girls Review who lived around the same time and died tragically in the same year of (?) lead poisoning. (Kiri-e type, colored print on paper in a 3x2 format: work number 41 in the Harajuk Series.) The Ziegfeld Follies were celebrated in a 1945 movie directed by Vincente Minelli, and Alberto Vargas (1896-1982) a painter of pin-up girls is perhaps most famous for his movie poster of Zita Johann (1933) in "The sin of Nora Moran".

Related themes

Olive ThomasZiegfeld FolliesHisako IchiyoVincente MinelliWilf Tilley

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Wilf Tilley (Prof. Michael W. Miller) was born in the North of England and began his career as an actor, age 16, with the National Youth Theatre at The Old Vic in a production of[...]

Wilf Tilley (Prof. Michael W. Miller) was born in the North of England and began his career as an actor, age 16, with the National Youth Theatre at The Old Vic in a production of Antony and Cleopatra in which Helen Mirren played Cleopatra and he carried a spear. “Wilf Tilley” (a combination of parental names) was part-adopted for a first solo exhibition at the AIR Gallery, London, when he was 27. Following an MA degree at the Royal College of Art, London, an interest in the neuro-anatomical drawings of Leonardo da Vinci led, via the Open University, to research on neuronal modelling in the Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics in the University of Oxford. He was a Fellow of St. Catherine's College, Oxford, and after a two-year Fellowship in the International Center for Medical Research, Kobe, was a founder member, then senior adviser at the RIKEN Brain Science Institute, where he designed a brain science exploratorium (BrainBox). Wilf has held eight solo exhibitions, participated in group exhibitions internationally, and held a first retrospective in Japan (The Neuro-mytheologian And Other Works), in 2003. A novel (The Ladyboy Murders) was shortlisted for the Impress Prize for New Writers in 2015. In November/December 2017, he held a second retrospective at the Frederick Harris Gallery, Tokyo. And a recent portrait (Manami-san) is part of the New Light Art Prize Exhibition in the UK, touring five galleries nationally (2023-2024).

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Digital Arts | Several sizes
Available
from $53.88
Digital Arts | Several sizes
Available
from $53.88

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