Mary Blair’s art exemplifies the bold colors and graphic flourishes that I love about the midcentury modern look—a combination of pop commercial appeal and a dreamlike atmosphere on a flat, almost nondimensional plane. I’m particularly a fan of the concept art she did at Disney, for Cinderella (what that movie could have been like if Walt had used her concepts more fully!), Peter Pan, and (especially) Alice in Wonderland. Those pieces are some of my favorite movie art ever, and it’s great to see them brought together in this book.
The Art and Flair of Mary Blair contains a nice selection of Blair’s art, presented chronologically, with written content to guide the reader through each phase of her life. It’s good, but for some reason (I can’t say why, exactly) I feel like this should be a heftier tome: larger format, better paper and printing, bigger selection of works. I’d like to see a more deluxe book of Blair’s work, and I would love to see an exhibit of original pieces someday.
Boo to author John Canemaker for his negativity toward Eyvind Earle: “But while Earle’s work is as high style as Blair’s, it lacks humor, whimsy, and any trace of warmth. It is interesting to speculate what Mary Blair might have brought to Sleeping Beauty” (72). Oh, come on. Earle’s work on Sleeping Beauty is unbeatable. No need to create a comparison just to put down one artist whose work isn’t the focus of this book.