Holiday Cards 2016: Charley
Harper’s Cardinals; The Group of Seven—Lawren S. Harris and Tom Thomson; Adolf
Dehn—Starry Night. Pomegranate. $15 each (Cardinals, Seven); $12 (Dehn).
At a time of year
traditionally associated with good wishes, good times and a good life – and
importantly, for many, the prospect of a good afterlife – there seems precious
little about which to rejoice this year. Gratitude for what is seems largely to
have given way to dismay for what is not; pleasure for what one has appears to
have diminished, while unhappiness over what one lacks seems to have increased.
To some extent, as winter takes hold in the Northern Hemisphere, feelings of
gloom are exacerbated by limited daylight, day after day of darkness beneath
overcast skies, and biting cold – it is worth remembering that Dante’s Inferno has its ninth and lowest circle
not in eternal heat but in a vast, perpetually frozen landscape. A traditional
time of year for joy and thanks – whether to each other, among family members,
or to higher powers – seems to have gone awry: yes, people may acknowledge, if
it is pointed out to them, that they are better off than others (materially and
even spiritually), but for many, it does not feel that way. This is not so much a matter of Yeats’ oft-quoted
lines from The Second Coming: “Things
fall apart; the centre cannot hold;/ Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.”
Rather, it is later lines in the same poem that seem to be operative this year:
“The best lack all conviction, while the worst/ Are full of passionate
intensity.”
One saving grace at a time
of deep dissatisfaction – and make no mistake, it is a kind of grace – is art. And although most of us will never be
artists, that is no barrier to sharing uplifting art along with the simple
words, “Season’s Greetings.” A great way to do that is with holiday cards from
Pomegranate, a publisher that promotes the inspirational nature of art through
many media, from books to calendars to puzzles, stickers and games. So diverse
and wide-ranging are Pomegranate’s offerings within its holiday-card line that
it is hard to imagine anyone not
being able to find something to provide a touch of uplift that can then be
passed along to light a figurative candle in a darkness that seems all too
real.
An excellent way to connect
with things beyond ourselves is through nature, and a number of Pomegranate
cards this year offer ways to do that – using art that is as different as the
elements of nature itself. For example, Charley
Harper’s Cardinals celebrates a bird that is strongly associated with
winter because it does not fly away from the cold and snow but stands out
against ice and bare tree limbs in the males’ brilliant red color. Harper
(1922-2007) was a poet of the natural world, with a drawing style emphasizing
an unrealistic flatness that somehow accentuates the features of animals and
makes them seem realer than real. The approach is unusual and instantly
recognizable once seen – Harper’s drawings are quite unlike those of other
nature artists. There are four of them in the 20-card box, five cards with each
drawing. “Cardinal Courtship,” showing a male and female beak to beak with the
male about to pop a treat into the female’s mouth, is clear enough, and food is
also the focus of “Cardinal Cuisine,” which shows a male pecking seeds from the
snow-covered ground. These two designs are attractive and basically serious,
but in Harper’s art, there is always a hint of humor, and that comes further to
the fore in the other two designs. One is called “Cool Cardinal” and features a
side view of a male upon which big white dots of snow are falling – and there
is a small pile of show on his head, which he does not seem to mind at all. The
rectangular scene of the cardinal is framed on both left and right by red dots
on a white background, creating a very pleasing color scheme with a whimsical
twist. The final design is called “B-r-r-r-r-rdbath” and shows a scene of a
male cardinal, his bright red feathers complemented by a red frame that is
shaped so the bird is seen in a circle, flapping his wings rapidly while sitting
in a birdbath on a snowy day. This cardinal is the only one in this box looking
right out of the card at the viewer – all the other birds are seen in side views
– and the effect is one of peering through a porthole or circular window as the
bird looks back. Harper’s cardinals can bring much-needed smiles both to the
cards’ senders and to their recipients, providing a connection with nature that
offers brief respite from complex human affairs.
Nature is seen on a grander
scale in 20 cards from the Canadian artists’ community called the Group of
Seven. Again there are five cards in each of four designs. The original central
person in the group’s formation was Tom Thomson (1877-1917), and two of his
works appear here, both from 1916. Both are woodland scenes showing a
distinctive and meticulous approach to portrayal of trees in the snow; one is
called “Snow in the Woods” and the other is titled “Wood Interior, Winter.”
Both offer almost-realistic but subtly emphasized scenes of woodland
tranquility beneath a blanket of undisturbed white. Thomson had died before the
group he inspired was organized under the aegis of Lawren S. Harris
(1885-1970), whose art is quite different from Thomson’s and complements it
intriguingly in this holiday-card collection. Harris offers a more
impressionistic view of nature, favoring, in these cards, triangular central
features that taper toward the top and appear to reach ever upward. “Mt.
Lefroy” (1930) is just what it says: a portrait of a snow-capped mountain whose
top pierces the clouds. But this is not a realistically portrayed mountain: it
is one capped by snow that looks almost like combed human hair, with neat
parallel valleys flowing from the mountaintop downward as the mountain’s peak
juts up into concentric circles of clouds. There is something almost hypnotic
about the scene, which is calming as well as majestic. “Winter Comes from the
Arctic to the Temperate Zone” (c. 1935) is similarly built around a central
upward-striving peak, but here the perspective is managed in such a way that
distance is uncertain: the mounds of snow in the foreground are shaped like the
mountain in the background but may simply be covering a tapering tree that is
nearby, with the mountain much more distant. The framing of this central scene
uses concentric not-circles – they are jagged shapes done in hues of the same
colors used for the mountain – and the whole picture pulls the eye in and
causes it to swoop gently upward in a wholly suitable seasonal response to the
art.
What is missing in both the
Charley Harper and Group of Seven cards is any sense of human beings in or
interacting with the natural scenes. But Pomegranate has other seasonal cards
in which humans do appear, whether in an idealized setting or in a realistic
one. Adolf Dehn (1895-1968) was a Minnesota artist who often portrayed regional
scenes, and one such appears this year on a set of 12 holiday cards. Called
“Starry Night” and inevitably calling up thoughts of the famous Van Gogh
painting, this is a scene in which the vast dark sky and its sparkling stars
fill more than half the card – but the immensity is not in the least
uncomfortable. The reason is that the card’s foreground shows bare,
snow-covered trees whose branches are highlighted against the night sky, and
amid the trees – providing the only bright colors in the watercolor – are three
people on skis just starting to head down a hill, plus, in a particularly nice
touch, a deer whose curiosity has apparently brought it closer than usual to
people (although it is still keeping its distance). There is a distinctly homey
quality to this card, which does not glamorize or romanticize a winter night –
it certainly looks cold enough, as the bundled-up skiers show – but which draws
the eye up from the foreground snow into the heavens above, using a technique
very different from that of Lawren Harris but one that is equally effective and
in some ways more subtle. Those who celebrate Christmas as a religious holiday
find it a time of spiritual comfort, and even those who do not share that faith
can look to the season as one of warmth, human connection and striving to be
better than we are. That is the counterweight to all the dismal feelings that
seem to permeate life this year – and if these Pomegranate cards cannot, on
their own, relieve the widespread sense of disaffection and anomie, they can at
least provide a small measure of beauty and comfort to offset distress with
quiet hope.