This is a 1930 edition of The Red Fairy Book with the cover and several illustrations by Frederick Richardson, who also did some beautiful work on Queen Zixi of Ix, which you can see over on Mr. Door Tree's blog site. Here, Richardson's illustrations are not as lush or rich as those by some of his contemporaries, but they are certainly not without charm, especially the cover. The rest of this edition was filled in with the original Ford and Speed pen drawings. I'm including one of Ford's at the bottom of this post.
Showing posts with label Fairy Tales. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fairy Tales. Show all posts
Not Without Charm
Andrew Lang was the go-to man for fairy tales in the early 1900s, and his spectrum of color fairy books are classic, not only for the tales gathered from around the world, but also for the beautiful fairy tale art by H.J. Ford, Lancelot Speed and others.
Fireside Fairytales
This is a fanciful image that can weave seductive daydreams for me.
Imagine a vast library and this might be but one chamber, and these are the world's greatest illustrated volumes of faerie lore (with perhaps some special volumes from 'the other side').
This is what it says on the advertisement for the print:
Join the wizard Ladnar and his wife Eleanor by the fireside as they tell of their adventures in the magical land of Ohm. Their listeners come from both sides of the magic mirror, and include the chocolate-loving Draglings™ (small house-dragons), Dagmar and Dewey.
If this catches your fancy, you probably will want to click here to go to Randal Spangler's Fantastic Art Realm, where you can purchase any number of fanciful prints of his work. He's got some other really cool views of the expansive library and some houses you'll probably want to live in.
To Keep Busy the Little Hands and Little Head
I have no idea if or how Gordon Robinson might be related to the Brothers Robinson — Wm Heath, Chas Heath & Tho Heath. But his work is interesting to me in that none other than Walt Kelly claimed him as one of his early inspirations for his own fairy tale work.
Robinson has a few books with his illustrations out there available in one form or another, but it seems there ought to be more than are currently itemized. I'm going to keep looking for some, but in the meantime you can see a nice example here, from the 1930s, Sleeping Beauty. I'm going to show the whole book, cover to cover, and would claim generosity except that the book is only 10 pages in its entirety. I'm also including some zoom-in details cuz I really like his pen style.
Robinson's work coulda/woulda been great in fairy tale comic books.
Autumnal and Mysterious
Though it has nothing to do with Fall or Halloween, here is an enigmatic illustration that feels autumnal and mysterious.
This drawing by Alfredo Montalti (1858-1928) is originally from C'era una Volta, a book of Italian fairy tales, published in Milan in 1885. This scan is from a rescued page from a decimated L'illustration periodical, carefully kept in my image morgue for many years. I was happy to find reference to it in Pen Drawing and Pen Draughtsmen by Joseph Pennell.
Pennell's book, originally published in 1889, has been reprinted a number of times, and is interesting, not just for the variety of old ink drawings, but also for Pennell's forthright and candid opinions on this artist or that. He especially is derisive of 'modern' illustration techniques (which to our time seems wonderfully classic). But he likes this drawing.
". . . this is an example of decoration applied to book illustration. Not only does it illustrate a passage in the story, but it is given with the greatest amount of decorative feeling, and in a style which proves that there is no reason why we should be dependent on the decorative methods of other times save to carry on tradition. Conventional forms are the property of the world. it may be argued that there is no meaning in this decoration. Neither to me—and I am sure I speak for all artists who are honest—is there meaning in nearly all decoration except that of pleasure in the beauty of the design. We may be told in Smith's Classical Dictionary, or in any of those useful cribs much affected by the cultured uplift artist, that such and such mysterious swirls and scrawls mean life and immortality, but we are not impressed by this hidden meaning; we only look to see if the line is well drawn—we do, but most do not; they are impressed with the details which have nothing to do with it at all.
Montalti's decorations at the side and top of his drawing are graceful. They many have been derived from old iron-work or from his inner consciousness. The result is pleasing and restful. The white circle behind the girl may be a swirl of life or the bull's eye of a target; it really is a proof that Montalti is an illustrator who knows the requirements of his art. He had used this white circle for his mass of light which draws attention to the figure of the girl; the figure of the piping shepherd is his great black, and the positive black and white neutralize each other. It also may be said that the half-decorative, half-realistic daisies at the bottom of the drawing are out of place: nothing is out of place in art if the result is good, and it is nobody's business but the artist's how it is obtained. . ."
Goblins
Gimme a chance, you guys jumped in too fast. I was doin' some Labor Day party stuff and went out to play badminton before posting the next item, which was . . .
The piece from Christina Rossetti's Goblin Market that Arthur Rackham painted that Craft's painting was a take on.
Geez, I didn't know anyone was payin' attention here.
The Old Fairy Tale Style
Some renderings visualize nature spirits as being more malevolent and crass.
This somewhat disturbing image, dripping with sexual innuendo, was a commissioned illustration by Kinuko Craft, for an adult version of Goblin Market, so don't blame her for its content. But it's a lovely execution in the old fairy tale style.
Creepy
A deliciously creepy half-title page from a grim Grimm's, 1894, by Gordon Browne. The Addams Family would adore this book.
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