This post is just the tip of the iceberg... see The Top Ten Reasons To Support The A-HAA for more jaw dropping images from classic illustrated books.

Arthur Rackham was one of the most influential illustrators who ever lived. If you aren't familiar with his work, see
Bud Plant's biography. These scans are from a first edition of
Grimm's Fairy Tales from 1909. This book is packed with amazing color plates and ink sketches.
Along with
Edmund Dulac, (see our previous postings of his work...
Poe's Poetical Works,
H. C. Andersen Stories, and
Tanglewood Tales) Rackham was one of the most popular book illustrators of the early 20th century.

Walt Disney admired Rackham's watercolor and pen & ink style, and instructed Gustaf Tenggren (see our previous postings of his work...
Small Fry and the Winged Horse,
Three Early Tenggren Books,
Grimm's Fairy Tales, and
The Little Trapper) to work with
Claude Coates and
Sam Armstrong to adapt it for use in
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. In animation backgrounds however, the sinewy Rackham line was overly busy, distracting from the characters; so Tenggren evolved towards the more dimensional painting style in Pinocchio, which set the standard for Disney cartoons throughout the 1940s.





























If you would like to explore more golden age illustration, see
The Top Ten Reasons To Support The Archive Project. If you find the postings on this website to be worthwhile, please do what you can to
Support The Archive Project. Every bit helps.
Thanks
Stephen Worth
Director
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
9.30.08
.
Labels: rerun
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1 Comments:
Gorgeous! Absolutely gorgeous!
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