Whether you display them on the wall or treasure them in a
portfolio, original artworks from children's books will never lose their charm.
If your budget is limited or the original artwork of your
favourite illustrator is scarce or unavailable, consider lesser-known
illustrators, whose work can be picked up from the low hundreds of pounds.
Names to look out for include John Hassall, Margaret Tarrant and Rene Cloke
from the first half of the 20th century, and Barbara Brown, Anne Mortimer and
Ronald Searle from the second half.
Margaret Tarrant illustrations |
Collectors often collect around a theme (everything to do
with Alice, for example), periods (say the restrained designs of the 1940s or
the primary colours of the 1950s) or according to genre (such as nursery
rhymes, animals or fairies).
Beatrix Potter illustration |
If you can't find or afford the type of illustration you'd
like, consider collecting colour plate books and sets of loose colour plates
instead. This style of book was popular in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries when printing techniques did not allow easy or affordable printing in
full colour. Colour plates were printed separately from the text of a book then
attached by hand to the page ('mounted and tipped in') or inserted loose (`laid
in'). Sometimes, limited-edition sets of colour plates were printed to
celebrate an important anniversary in a book's history. While they are not the
original artwork, they have visual impact.
John Hassall illustration |
While EH Shepard illustrations regularly come up for sale,
the same cannot be said of original artworks by that other titan of the
children's book world, Beatrix Potter. Most of the original drawings and
watercolours for her 'little books' are held in the Warne Archive and the
Linder Archive, both part of the National Art Library at the V&A. A rare
cache of original Potter watercolours, Christmas cards and letters from the
1890s, created for family and friends, did surface in 2008 at Sotheby's,
selling for £748,200 in total.
Ronald Searle illustration |
'The watercolours were as fresh as the day she'd
drawn them, with exquisite detail, and they were quite breathtaking for the
feelings they conveyed,' says Sotheby's specialist Dr Philip Errington. Members
of the public can apply to view original Potter artwork at the National Art
Library's Blythe House Reading Room, near Olympia, London (020 7602 0281 ext
212; vam.ac.uk/page/b/beatrix-potter).
One of Shepard's very first Winnie-the-Pooh colour drawings produced in 1928 |
Where to see
Set up by leading illustrators Quentin Blake and Emma
Chichester Clark, House of Illustration at 2 Granary Square, King's Cross,
London is dedicated to illustration past and present. 020 3696 2020;
houseofillustration.org.uk
The National Art Library at the Victoria and Albert Museum,
Cromwell Road, London holds nearly 100,000 children's books dating from the
16th century onwards. Accessible by appointment. 020 7942 2000; vam.ac.uk
The Museum of Childhood, Cambridge Heath Road, Bethnal
Green, London holds other children's book collections. 020 8983 5200;
vam.ac.uk/moc
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