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 Container

Box 2

Contains 5 Results:

 File — Box: 2, Folder: 5

Scope and Contents:

Lubell 2/5: 35

Ink drawing in the form of three loose sketches of what appear to be the same unknown object. Detail is not sparse, but the lack of a central element or context makes identifying the subject further largely fruitless. Verso has a pencil outline of the object. Drawn on illustration board. See also Lubell 39.

17.1 x 13.8 cm

 File — Box: 2, Folder: 5

Scope and Contents:

Lubell 2/5: 36

Ink over graphite pencil drawing (with gray wash and red watercolor). A branch of a magnolia tree. Detail is very sparse, and red wash is used only to partially and lightly color leaves and flowers (along with even less grey wash for one small part of the branch). Ink lines are similarly thin and break away near the corners of the piece.

22.9 x 30.4 cm

 File — Box: 2, Folder: 5

Scope and Contents:

Lubell 2/5: 37

Ink drawing of a loosely-drawn harbor, with several different ships in the process of going to or from the sea. Details are added extremely loosely, and the less specific use of lines are somewhat similar in use to Impressionist work (for example, groups of small lines are used to show the large wooden poles below the water, while the thinner lines for the bird and rigging gives a sense of movement to the piece. Signed Milius.

30.1 x 44.5 cm

 File — Box: 2, Folder: 5

Scope and Contents: Lubell 2/5: 38 Print of a pen and ink drawing of a field, framed from outside a broken wire fence. Level of detail is very high, with extensive line patterns on the (Bob White) birds’ feathers, pine trees and foreground plant life. Light and half-drawn background lines are used for the horizon, in contrast to the minutiae of the primary space. The drawing has been printed as a page in a 1978 calendar for Hyannis Co-operative Bank. Hyannis is a bank in Cape Cod, which is likely...
 File — Box: 2, Folder: 5

Scope and Contents: Lubell 2/5: 39 Multiple ink drawings of a cephalopod or plant entirely alien in nature and composition, appearing equal parts flora and fetal. It (assuming it is even a living creature and that the sketches are of the same entity) has a myriad of small tendrils covering its body, and one loose sketch shows it curled into a fetal position. Further description is made more adverse by the lack of any context or familiarity beyond in its form. Could be an attempt to show a young or...