Born in New York in 1916, Eyvind Earle began his prolific
career at the age of ten when his father, Ferdinand Earle,
gave him a challenging choice: read 50 pages of a book
or paint a picture every day. Earle choose both. From
the time of his first one-man showing in France when he
was 14, Earle’s fame had grown steadily. At the age of
21, Earle bicycled across country from Hollywood to New
York, paying his way by painting 42 watercolors. In 1937,
he opened at the Charles Morgan Galleries, his first of
many one-man shows in New York. Two years later at his
third consecutive showing at the gallery, the response
to his work was so positive that the exhibition sold out
and the Metropolitan Museum of Art purchased one of his
paintings for their permanent collection. His earliest
work was strictly realistic, but after having studied
the work of a variety of masters such as Van Gogh, Cézanne,
Rockwell, Kent and Georgia O’Keefe, Earle by the age of
21, came into his own unique style. His oeuvre is characterized
by a simplicity, directness and surety of handling.
In 1951 Earle joined Walt Disney studios as an assistant
background painter. Earle intrigued Disney in 1953 when
he created the look of “Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom”
an animated short that won an Academy Award and a Cannes
Film Festival Award. Disney kept the artist busy for the
rest of decade, painting the settings for such stories
as “Peter Pan”, “For Whom the Bulls Toil”, “Working for
Peanuts”, “Pigs is Pigs”, “Paul Bunyan” and “Lady and
the Tramp”. Earle was responsible for the styling, background
and colors for the highly acclaimed movie “Sleeping Beauty”
and gave the movie its magical, medieval look. He also
painted the dioramas for Sleeping Beauty’s Castle at Disneyland
in Anaheim, California.
Earle’s
work was also seen on television. One of his animated
creations was an 18-minute version of the story of the
Nativity that he did in 1963 for Tennessee Ernie Ford’s
Special “The Story of Christmas”. A Daily Variety reviewer
said Earle’s sequence “should be preserved and played
back for years on end.” The show was digitally re-mastered
in 1997.
Earle’s career has encompassed many different fields.
In addition to book illustrating, the artist had also
designed a number of covers for magazine publications
and had produced and created several animated commercials
and specials for television.
In 1998, at its Annie Awards show in Glendale,
the International Animated Film Society gave Earle its
Windsor McCay Award for lifetime achievement. In the 1940’s,
Earle adapted his creative landscapes to Christmas cards,
painting more than 800 designs that have sold more than
300 million copies through American Artist Group.
After about 15 years creating animated
art, Earle returned to painting full time in 1966 and
kept working until the end of his life. In addition to
his watercolors, oils, sculptures, drawings and scratchboards,
in 1974 he began making limited edition serigraphs. Eyvind
Earle had a totally original perception of landscape.
He successfully synthesizes seemingly incongruent aspects
into a singularly distinctive style: a style, which is
at once mysterious, primitive, disciplined, moody and
nostalgic. He captures the grandeur of simplicity of the
American countryside, and represents these glimpses of
the American scene with a direct lyric ardor. His landscapes
are remarkable for their suggestion of distances, landmasses
and weather moods. “For 70 years,” Earle wrote in 1996,
“I’ve painted paintings, and I’m constantly and everlastingly
overwhelmed at the stupendous infinity of Nature. Wherever
I turn and look, there I see creation. Art is creating...Art
is the search for truth.”
Eyvind
Earle passed away on July 20, 2000 at the age of 84. During
his lifetime he created many paintings, sculptures, scratchboards,
watercolors and drawings that have not been publicly seen
or exhibited. Eyvind Earle Publishing LLC, under the specific
instruction of the late Eyvind Earle, will continue the
legacy of the artist, promoting and introducing new serigraphs
and books through galleries worldwide. These posthumous
limited edition serigraphs will be printed from the oil
paintings created by Eyvind Earle that are in the collection
of Joan Earle and others.
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