

This suite and the profiled illustration. Each of ourĪrt Posters is prepared with archival quality papers and inks - and also accompanied by More of these images, we have provided some options below.

Should you wish to order a reproduction print of one or Illustration - we have left the interior of the cards blank so that you may write The rear of each card carries informationĪrthur Rackham, this wonderful suite and the profiled On Ivory card stock with an accompanying envelope. Typical of prestige illustrated publications produced in the early decades Images are prepared as tipped-on plates - in 'hommage' to the hand-crafted approach Inclusive of the frontispiece to the 1912 (approximately 7x5" on premium acid-free card This example retains the original gilt-stamped red cloth cover.įine Art Posters showing Arthur Rackham'sįor connoisseurs of Rackham's work, we have prepared sets of 51 Greeting Cards Rackham's illustrations for Peter Pan in Kensington GardensĮpitomise the sublime nature of his style. Kensington Gardens and an expanded suite was published that included a new colour illustration (presentedĪs the frontispiece) and many more monotone In 1912, Rackham revised his illustrations for Peter Pan in The leaves with their sense of fun (the gayest thing this)Īnd your treatment of snow. The ''tiff'' and the fairy on cobweb) - the faires sewing Like the flying Peters, the fairies going to the ball (as in I think I like best of all the Serpentine with the fairiesĪnd the Peter in his nightgown sitting in the tree. The author, himself, wrote to Rackham after viewing anĮxhibition of the illustrations extending his thanks for the artists work: Mr Rackham, for his part, has been bewitched in his cradle: he does not dream of Release of "Alice", he has invented a new legend,Ĭomprehends all the innermost secrets of the modern child, be he four or forty. "Mr Barrie has done what no one else has done since the World provides some insight into the reception the publication received upon

"Peter Pan" "The Thrush's Nest" "Lock-Out Time" "The LittleĪ contemporary review of the 1906 Edition published in The Many adventures - including the dangerous flight to Neverland and confrontations with Captain Hook - follow throughĬhapters entitled: "The Grand Tour of the Gardens" Takes her to Neverland to be mother to his gang of Lost Boys (the children lost in Kensington Gardens). Mary Darling to her children (one of whom is Wendy). It tells the story of Peter Pan - the eternal child living in Neverland - who often visits London to listen to bedtime stories told by Mrs Published by Hodder & Stoughton (London) in 1906,Īrthur Rackham's illustrated Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens was a 'tour de force'.įor this First Edition, Rackham turns his prodigious skillīarrie's play, "The Little White Bird". Illustrated by Arthur Rackham and published first in 1906, with a revised and enlarged edition published in 1912
