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The 'Golden Age' of illustration
The origins of what has now become known as the Golden Age of children's book illustration can be traced all the way back to the work of George Cruikshank (1792 - 1878), who is recognised as the first artist to set the standard in children's book illustration.

Working in the early part of the nineteenth century, Cruikshank laid the framework for the great flowering of the illustrator's art that began in the mid-nineteenth century.
A Fantasy, The Fairy Ring, George Cruikshank, 1850
A Fantasy, The Fairy Ring, George Cruikshank, 1850

Cruikshank's
genius directly inspired Richard Doyle and John Tenniel, while the pioneering work of the Victorian engravers William James Linton and the Dalziel Brothers and of the colour printer Edmund Evans contributed greatly to the enduring success of Walter Crane, Randolph Caldecott and Kate Greenaway. With these illustrators, nursery rhymes, fairy tales, animal stories and children's picture books entered upon a new and 'modern' era of artistic refinement.

The last years of the nineteenth century saw a great awakening of interest in folk tales, revived by Andrew Lang and Joseph Jacobs, and in the pages of the Strand magazine, from all parts of the world. At the same time Howard Pyle was revolutionizing American children's books, and encouraging his many talented students to follow his example. This revival in the appreciation of old fairy tales and children's stories coincided with the threat to traditional cultures posed by the advance of the industrial world.

The Golden Age of children's book illustration reached it's undoubted peak in the decade from 1905 to 1914 when dozens of opulent large quarto gift books with mounted colour plates, and hundreds of cheaper but often equally beautiful illustrated volumes were published every year. These years saw the rise of this century's greatest and most popular illustrators, including Arthur Rackham, Edmund Dulac, Willy Pogany, Kay Nielsen, W Heath Robinson and Jessie Willcox Smith. This incredible wealth of talent of book illustration, the innumerable fine drawings and paintings combining fantasy, humour and shear beauty, and the array of masterly pictorial cover designs richly adorned in gilt have never been equalled.

Although the overall quality of the book production never recovered it's former grandeur after the First World War, Arthur Rackham and many of his younger contemporaries helped to sustain the Golden Age dusring the 1920s and 1930s. Among the most stunning volumes which retained all the glory of the pre-war years were Harry Clarke's The Fairy Tales of Perrault (1922), William M Timlin's The Ship That Sailed to Mars (1923), and Edward J Detmold's The Arabian Nights (1924).

The death of Rackham and the appearance of his last superb book illustrations in The Wind in the Willows, coinciding with the start of the Second World War, marked the final demise of the Golden Age.

Source: The Golden Age of Children's Book Illustration by Richard Dalby - published by Michael O'Mara Books Limited, 1991 - ISBN: 1-85479-041-2


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