Henry Justice Ford
Illustration from The Yellow Fairy Book.
"H. J. Ford, who is perhaps best known for his collaboration with Andrew Lang on the series of twelve Coloured Fairy Books (1889-1910), had a somewhat unusual career for an illustrator. Born in London, where he spent most of his life, he attended Repton and won a scholarship to Clare College, Cambridge, from which he graduated with a first-class degree in classics. After graduation, he studied at the Slade school of Art with Alphonse Legros and the Bushey school of Art with Sir Hubert Herkomer. A friend of Sir Edward Burne-Jones, he exhibited history paintings and landscapes at the Royal Academy between 1892 and 1903. In addition creating illustrations for the Fairy Books, he also produced many historical subjects set from the middle ages to the eighteenth-century for Lang's The Red True Story Book (1895) and other works. He also illustrated The Arabian Nights Entertainments (1895) and Pilgrim's Progress (1921)." - quote from Victorian Web
Illustration of Scylla, from "Tales Of Troy and Greece" originally published in 1907. See more from this book here.
The Dragon of the North, wood engraving, 1894
The Seven-Headed Serpent, wood engraving, 1894
Rosalie Guarded by the Genii, Illustration for "The Invisible Prince."
Illustration for "The Witch," a Russian folktale, from Lang's Yellow Fairy Book, p. 230.
Illustration for "King Kojata" wood engraving, 1892
More Ford fantasy illustrations can be found at Victoria Web.org.
THE GENIUS AND THE MERCHANTS
SINDBAD IN THE VALLEY OF SERPENTS
THE GIANT ENTERS
THE GIANTS HURL ROCKS AT SINDBAD AND HIS COMPANIONS
The above 4 illustrations were originally published in an 1898 edition of The Arabian Nights. View more artwork and the written stories of the book at Sacred Texts.com
The above 5 illustrations taken from The Red Fairy Book, more from this collection of fantasy tales here.
1 comment:
God! Just beautiful! Thanks for the post & your continuous hard work man.
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