Friday, September 29, 2017

Alan Odle (1888–1948)


Alan Oldle - Title Unknown 2

Alan Odle - The Crucial Incision, illustration from "Candide" by Voltaire, 1922The Crucial Incision, illustration from "Candide" by Voltaire, 1922

Alan Odle - The Illness of Candide in Paris, illustration from "Candide" by Voltaire, 1922The Illness of Candide in Paris, illustration from "Candide" by Voltaire, 1922

Alan Odle - Oreillon Reception, illustration from "Candide" by Voltaire, 1922Oreillon Reception, illustration from "Candide" by Voltaire, 1922

Alan Oldle - Title Unknown 1

Alan Odle - The Malicious SatyrThe Malicious Satyr

Alan Oldle - Title Unknown 4

Alan Odle - Illustration from the magazine "The Gypsy", 1915
Illustration from the magazine "The Gypsy," 1915

Alan Odle - Illustration from the magazine "The Gypsy," 1915
Illustration from the magazine "The Gypsy," 1915
 Alan Oldle - Title Unknown 3

"Alan Elsden Odle was an English illustrator, remembered today as the husband of the English novelist Dorothy Richardson, whom he married in 1917.  His grotesque and subversive style was a precursor of surrealism. He illustrated an English edition of Voltaire's Candide (G. Routledge, 1922), Mark Twain's 1601: A Tudor Fireside Conversation, a salute to scatology and Elizabethan manners (London: Printed for Subscribers only, 1936), and The Mimiambs of Herondas.  He also designed the dust jacket for James Hanley's Ebb and Flow (London: John Lane, 1932), other Hanley novels for Lane, and Dorothy Richardson's Backwater (1916).  He contributed to a number of periodicals such as The Gypsy, The Golden Hind (1922–25), the US Vanity Fair, The Studio, and the UK Argosy.

Odle was a distinctly bohemian figure and he associated with an artistic circle that included Augustus John, Jacob Epstein, and Wyndham Lewis. When he married Dorothy Richardson he was tubercular and an alcoholic, and was not expected to live long. However, he stopped drinking and lived until 1948. Odle was very thin and "over six feet tall with waist-length hair wound around the outside of his head", which he never cut. He also rarely cut his fingernails. From 1917 until 1939, the couple spent their winters in Cornwall and their summers in London; and then stayed permanently in Cornwall until Odle’s death in 1948. Richardson supported herself and her husband with freelance writing for periodicals for many years, as Alan made little money from his art." - quote source


Artworks found at Victor Arwas Gallery, Radnorshire Fine Arts Ltd and alanodle.com


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