EDNOTE.  Christopher Berg, an American composer living in Paris, has set several Nabokov poems to music.
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Christopher Berg
To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum
Sent: Sunday, June 15, 2003 11:03 PM
Subject: RE: VN and idealize Americana images

I am surprised no one has mentioned it yet, but the ad in question is reproduced in very small miniature in Jane Grayson's Nabokov volume in the Penguin Illustrated Lives series. Page 98. The product is Viyella, a miracle fabric of some kind, I think.
 
Christopher Berg
cberg@freesurf.fr
-----Original Message-----
From: Vladimir Nabokov Forum [mailto:NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU]On Behalf Of D. Barton Johnson
Sent: Monday, June 16, 2003 4:58 AM
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
Subject: Fw: VN and idealize Americana images

EDNOTE. Appeal and Boyd have both pointed to particular images from magazines as icons of idealized American life (a.k.a. poshlost').
If you have such images please notify Mr. Brown and NABOKV-L. 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Andrew Brown
To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum
Sent: Sunday, June 15, 2003 5:01 PM
Subject: Re: VN and idealize Americana images

Several years ago, after my father's death, I inherited a collection that my grandmother had compiled over the years -- a series of covers, and a few inside pages, of The Saturday Evening Post, from the 1930s into the 1960s.  Many of these covers are original Norman Rockwells.
 
Rockwell, as you may know, was an American illustrator who had a talent for capturing characteristic though idealized scenes of American life. I've seen in this collection what I believe to be many of the "set piece" images Nabokov may have been inspired by as "starting points for his own ironic, and more realistic view of American life, with all its commerciality, its ever-present subtext of eroticism, particularly of girls, and male figures who were recognizeable American types, drawn up to rather heroic proportions.
 
I'm going to be looking through this box of covers shortly, in order to have some framed as prints for family members and friends, and will keep in mind the print advertisement Nabokov refers to. Nabokov also refers often to popular American photographic images from the original, and very-good- for-its-kind, American family illustrated news magazine, Life -- I mean the original Life, not the present revived but inferior publication
 
I've seen several ad illustrations of disheveled but handsome hubbies with breakfast trays in this collection, and will give you the brand name of the product if I run across it. Companies often have much of their advertising archived, and you may be able to obtain a print, if it's from a company that maintains a good public relations staff.
 
Unfortunately, since the American economy was hijacked by executives who felt they needed seven and eight figure salaries, some of the first departments and staff to be cut were the corporate library and archive personnel. These departments were "overhead," and when operating budgets are slashed, they are usually among the first to go -- and decades of advertising images are dumped into the trash.
 
AB
---- Original Message -----
From: Andrew Brown
To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum
Sent: Saturday, June 14, 2003 2:01 PM
Subject: Re: The conquering hero?

I need to clarify the following:
 
"I've seen in this collection what I believe to be many of the "set piece" images Nabokov may have been inspired by as "starting points for his own ironic, and more realistic view of American life...",
 
Nabokov certainly did not need The Saturday Evening Post or any other magazine as a "starting point" for anything. I meant that his "take" on America brilliantly revealed the strange, yet more real and more beautiful soul, for which Norman Rockwell's art served as a scrubbed, Sunday dressed, anodyne commercial. 
 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: D. Barton Johnson
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
Sent: Friday, June 13, 2003 11:50 PM
Subject: Fw: The conquering hero?

 
----- Original Message -----
From: Ole Nyegaard
To: Nabokov Listserver
Sent: Monday, June 09, 2003 2:23 AM
Subject: The conquering hero?

 
The ad which Dolores Haze has hung on her wall ("...a dark-haired young husband with a kind of drained look in his Irish eyes. He was modeling a robe by So-and So and holding a bridgelike tray by So-and So, with breakfast for two".), and Appel has reproduced in his anntotations, is it available somewhere on the internet - or somewhere else, for that matter?
 
And now I'm at it, is René Prinet's "Kreutzer Sonata" to be found anywhere? The only thing I found was a smudged little thing called "The Kiss", which fits with the description given by V.N. in Appel's notes ("an ill-groomed girl pianist rising like a wave from her stool after completing the duo, and being kissed by a hirsute violinist").
 
Best wishes
Ole Nyegaard, Aarhus, Denmark.