Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens: Arthur Rackham’s Haunting Illustrations for the Barrie Classic

“There’s nearly nothing that has such a eager sense of enjoyable as a fallen leaf.”


Within the first years of the 20th century, an odd e-book titled The Little White Chicken, or Adventures in Kensington Gardens enchanted readers with its fusion of caprice and darkish humor, its method of addressing adults in a method that honors the everlasting youngster alive in every of us, and particularly with one among its characters: a small boy named Peter Pan.

4 years later, six of its chapters sprouted a brand new e-book, not for adults however for precise youngsters. J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens (public library | public area) — the story of child Peter, who, “like all infants,” was half chicken however has now to study to reside an earthbound life — was printed in 1906 with illustrations by the wildly imaginative, wildly prolific Arthur Rackham (September 19, 1867–September 6, 1939).

Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.

A yr later, Rackham would revolutionize the expertise and economics of e-book artwork along with his Alice in Wonderland illustrations; Peter Pan grew to become the R&D lab for his revolution, working throughout the limitations of the three-color printing course of then out there to create worlds of surprise along with his meticulous ink traces, populating London’s acquainted landscapes and locations with otherworldly creatures of haunting tenderness and strangeness — Shakespearean fairies and speaking mice and, after all, his signature enchanted bushes.

Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.

Right here was a tall gaunt man who regarded like a priest and carried himself like a professor, neat and exact, Victorian to the bone, wresting from his unquiet thoughts one thing of such wildness and such defiant magnificence that one is staggered into remembering that consciousness abides no exteriors.

Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.

Upon seeing Rackham’s illustrations, Barrie discovered himself “entranced.”

“I’m all the time your debtor,” he wrote to the artist.

Rackham, for his half, felt betrayed by Barrie within the land of the creativeness, faulting the creator for creating two fully completely different Peter Pans — the infant of Kensington gardens and the everlasting youngster of By no means-By no means Land, which he felt had “fully eclipsed” the primary Peter regardless of By no means-By no means Land being a “poor prosy substitute” for the unique world.

Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.

“I remorse that the possibility has been let slip of completely peopling Kensington Gardens because the e-book might need carried out it,” Rackham rued of the rise of the second Peter, overlooking the truth that it was the primary, as rendered in his personal enchanted artwork, from which the second had sprung, each within the public’s creativeness and within the creator’s. With out Rackham’s fairies, there may be no Wendy; with out Rackham’s Queen Mab, there may not be half of Disney.

Accessible as a print.
Queen Mab. Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.
Accessible as a print and as stationery playing cards.

Complement with Rackham’s illustrations for The Tempest and Irish fairy tales, then revisit the tragic teenage prodigy Virginia Frances Sterrett’s tender and haunting illustrations for outdated French fairy tales.


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