Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Another Look at Ernest Chiriaka

Sad news arrived this morning that Ernest Chiriaka passed away yesterday, April 27, 2010, at age 96. His obituary is at David Saunders' Pulp Artists website.


This seemed like the right time to take another look at our previously presented series on the artist from 2006, which was made possible thanks to the generosity of David Saunders and Illustration magazine's Dan Zimmer...

Ernest Chiriaka


I always have a link in my sidebar to Dan Zimmer's Illustration magazine, but this week I really need to highlight this great publication because Dan has kindly given me permission to except the Chiriaka article from the 8th issue of Illustration (which you can still order!) written by Norm Saunders' son, David. Many thanks to Dan and I encourage everyone to consider getting a subscription to Illustration ( especially if you have a birthday coming up soon and your wife's not sure what to get you - are you reading this, Wendy? ;-)

The following text is © 2003 David Saunders:

Ernest Chiriacka was born Anastassios Kyriakakos in New York City on May 11, 1913, and lived at 42 Madison Street on the Lower East Side. To imagine the living conditions of this ghetto at the turn of the century, look at the heart-breaking photo-essay by Jacob Riis, “How the Other Half Lives,” which revealed the astonishing hardships of children growing up in these shamefully squalid tenement buildings. His parents, Portia and Herakles Kyriakakos, had emigrated from the mountain village of Xero Cambi in the Sparta region of Greece in 1907. Herakles was an educated young man who had studied to be a Greek Orthodox abbot, but could not adjust to the harsh reality of the bustling slums of New York, where the only jobs for a non-lingual immigrant were unskilled menial labor. Although Hercules performed his 12 heroic labors, Herakles refused to lower himself to work as a dishwasher, shoeshiner, or push-cart laborer. He changed his name to “Harry Chiriacka,” but made no further effort to become an American or learn English, and he fell into the languid despair of drink. Fortunately, his wife Portia was an industrious person who raised six children, supervising their public school educations as well as their attendance in Greek school to learn their native culture and language. Anastassios was their third child. He was called “Tasso” for short, which is pronounced “dah-so,” and is transliterated as “Darcy.”

This was part One of a week-long series origially presented in 2006. If you'd like to read the rest of the series, here are the links:

Chiriaka and "The Slicks"
Chiriaka: "A Serious Artist"
Chiriaka's esquire Girls
Chiriaka's Movie Poster art

*Also, be sure to check out UK Vintage's Ernest ("Darcy") Chiriaka Paperback Cover Gallery on Flickr

4 comments:

  1. Wow...I loved his stuff. I didn't realize he'd been alive so long.

    Glad he was.

    =s=

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  2. Sad to hear of his passing. His work will go on foever!

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  3. I think it's a miracle that we had Ernest Chiriaka as long as we did. I'm grateful for his talent, envious of the work he produced, inspired by the way he moved from medium to medium and era to era. His passing was inevitable, and now that it's here I'm heartbroken. So yes, I'm a fan.

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