Happily Ever After? Illustrating Andersen & Perrault
Heath Robinson Museum 50 West End Lane, Pinner, United KingdomTwo collections of Fairy Tales stand out in William Heath Robinson’s illustrative work. These are the Fairy Tales of Hans Christian Andersen, which he illustrated three times, and those collected by Charles Perrault. The Perrault stories were translated from the French by his agent A E Johnson and published in 1921 under the title Old…
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Harrow Baptist Church College Road, HarrowIllustrating the Grotesque
Heath Robinson Museum 50 West End Lane, Pinner, United KingdomFollowing the success of Uncle Lubin (1902), Heath Robinson was commissioned to illustrate The Works of Rabelais. These portray a bleak landscape largely peopled by grotesque peasants and priests whose lives are dominated by fear and superstition and who can find relief only in drunkenness and debauchery.
Illustrating the Grotesque
Heath Robinson Museum 50 West End Lane, Pinner, United KingdomFollowing the success of Uncle Lubin (1902), Heath Robinson was commissioned to illustrate The Works of Rabelais. These portray a bleak landscape largely peopled by grotesque peasants and priests whose lives are dominated by fear and superstition and who can find relief only in drunkenness and debauchery.
Illustrating the Grotesque
Heath Robinson Museum 50 West End Lane, Pinner, United KingdomFollowing the success of Uncle Lubin (1902), Heath Robinson was commissioned to illustrate The Works of Rabelais. These portray a bleak landscape largely peopled by grotesque peasants and priests whose lives are dominated by fear and superstition and who can find relief only in drunkenness and debauchery.
Illustrating the Grotesque
Heath Robinson Museum 50 West End Lane, Pinner, United KingdomFollowing the success of Uncle Lubin (1902), Heath Robinson was commissioned to illustrate The Works of Rabelais. These portray a bleak landscape largely peopled by grotesque peasants and priests whose lives are dominated by fear and superstition and who can find relief only in drunkenness and debauchery.
Illustrating the Grotesque
Heath Robinson Museum 50 West End Lane, Pinner, United KingdomFollowing the success of Uncle Lubin (1902), Heath Robinson was commissioned to illustrate The Works of Rabelais. These portray a bleak landscape largely peopled by grotesque peasants and priests whose lives are dominated by fear and superstition and who can find relief only in drunkenness and debauchery.