Deeds''s subtle, meticulous, and wildly imaginative pencil and crayon drawings portray an unusual cast of characters: nineteenth-century dandies, Civil War soldiers, antique cars, fantastic boats and trains, country landscapes dotted with roaming animals, and fanciful architecture. None of these existed in the actual mid-twentieth-century landscape of Deeds''s own life, but rather were representations of his inner world-an artist''s poignant tribute to a faded past. Deeds lovingly bound his artwork in a cardboard and leather portfolio, a present for his mother. After being accidentally discarded in 1970, the album was rescued from the trash by a young boy and, thirty-six years later, came into the hands of artist and collector Harris Diamant, who provides the book''s foreword. The Electric Pencil features all 283 of Deeds''s arresting drawings-now avidly collected-done on ledger sheets from State Hospital No. 3 in Nevada, Missouri, and reproduced in the sequence of the original album. The Electric Pencil introduces readers to an astonishing record of one man''s unwavering artistic vision in the face of the most inhospitable conditions.
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Product Details
Format: Paperback
Weight: 850g
Dimensions: 209 x 243mm
Publication Date: 29 Mar 2016
Publisher: Princeton Architectural Press
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781616894542
About James Edward Deeds Jr.
James Edward Deeds (1908-1987) was raised on a farm near Ozark Missouri. From age 25 he spent the remainder of his life institutionalized. Deeds created his remarkable drawings while a resident of State Hospital Number 3 in Nevada Missouri. Richard Goodman is the author of French Dirt: The Story of a Garden in the South of France The Soul of Creative Writing A New York Memoir and The Bicycle Diaries: One New Yorker's Journey Through 9/11. He has written for The New York Times Creative Nonfiction Harvard Review River Teeth Chautauqua Vanity Fair Ascent French Review and Michigan Quarterly Review. He is an assistant professor of creative nonfiction writing at the University of New Orleans. His website is www.richardgoodman.org.