Excerpt:
...Eddie Arning's work has been compared to trends and
styles in avant-garde twentieth-century art. His own
thinking about his work did not, however, include questions
of artistic borrowings or influences, concepts and concerns
entirely unknown to him. But it is necessary to look
at those borrowings to understand his work. The sources
for most of his images were illustrations and advertisements
from some of the most popular magazines in the United
States, such as Life, Readers' Digest, and Better Homes
and Gardens. Arning's artistic vision and aesthetic
choice should be seen within the wider framework of
his borrowings and interpretations of American visual
culture. The advertisement or illustration is his starting
point: an image whose composition is part of the dynamic
process of communicating the associations and emotions
embedded within it.
In the band of black along the bottom of a drawing Arning
writes: 'We know what they want to wear Because they
told us.' That line is there because it was included
in the magazine fashion layout the artist used as the
model for his work. And indeed the seven children are
fashionably dressed, with the two boys approaching from
the right wearing shirts sporting the vivid geometric
designs popular in 1971. The figures' interaction was
of greater importance to Arning and was what no doubt
prompted him to base an image upon this particular photograph.
The bursts of tree branches, the beat of black squares
on blue from which one child emerges, and the close
dance of the girl whose yellow dress follows the lead
of the water fountain are reiterated in the rhythm of
their turned heads and bent arms.