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Kid 25's
Library Exhibits
Monoliths in Wood
Woodcut Illustrators
Monoliths in Wood
The Art of Aubrey Beardsley
(by
Symons, Arthur
)
Albrecht Durer
(by
Heath, Richard Ford
)
Durer (Engravings)
(by
DRer, Albrecht
)
Drawings of Albrecht D Rer
(by
DRer, Albrecht
)
Paradise Lost. Illustrated by Gustave Do...
(by
Milton, John
)
Inferno. Translated by Henry Francis Car...
(by
Dante Alighieri
)
Works : Volume 1
(by
Tennyson, Alfred Tennyson, Baron
)
Life and Reminiscences of Gustave Dore :...
Gargantua and Pantagruel
(by
Rabelais, François
)
Aubrey Beardsley, Drawings
(by
Beardsley, Aubrey
)
Salome : A Tragedy in One Act
(by
Wilde, Oscar
)
Aubrey Beardsley
(by
Ross, Robert Baldwin
)
Last Letters of Aubrey Beardsley
(by
Aubrey Beardsley, John Gray
)
The Later Work of Aubrey Beardsley
(by
Beardsley, Aubrey
)
The Early Work of Aubrey Beardsley
(by
Beardsley, Aubrey
)
While comic and graphic novel artists of today have changed the format and consumption of book illustration, the classic black-and-white engraving era of book illustrations still remain in our minds and libraries. Although it's always difficult to pick a definitive “best of” list due to their subjectivity, there will always be illustrators and printmakers whose style and pervasive influence keep them cemented in innovation for all time.
This article focuses on printmakers who worked with forms of woodblock printing.
Woodblock printing
originated as a textile printing method in China as early as 220 AD, and in time came to include
wood engraving
and
woodcut
. All woodblock styles use the relief method of printing, wherein the lines of the print are made visible by cutting out the negative space of the print, effectively creating a stamp. Ink is then applied to the wood which is pressed onto paper, creating a print.
Albrecht Dürer
As great printmakers go,
Albrecht Dürer
jumps to mind immediately. A German Renaissance man of the 15th century, Dürer unleashed an unthinkable amount of work beginning at a young age. His engravings and paintings, as well as his work in theoretical geometry, German linguistics, and human proportions laid the groundwork for his fame and influence. One of his early famous works of woodcuts is a series called
Apocalypse
. For more of his work and life, read
Drawings of Albrecht Dürer
,
Dürer Engravings
, and
Albrecht Dürer
by Heath Richard Ford.
Gustave Doré
Gustave Doré
rose to prominence in the middle of 19th century France, creating perhaps the largest number of literary-based woodcuts of his time. He began work as a caricaturist for a small French paper at the age of 15. His work there soon earned him commissions for woodcut book illustrations. Throughout his long career, he created oversized illustrations for some of the greatest works of literature, including
Paradise Lost
by John Milton,
Inferno
by Dante Alighieri,
Collected Works
by Lord Alfred Tennyson , and
Gargantua and Pantagruel
by François Rabelais. For more of Doré’s life and works, check out
Life and Reminiscences
of Gustave Dore by Blanche Roosevelt.
Aubrey Beardsley
Much like the other two giants,
Aubrey Beardsley
also had a young and prolific start. He began his major work around the age of 18 in the late 19th century and had the shortest career of these three due to tuberculosis, cutting it short at age 25. Much of Beardsley's work was inspired by
Japanese woodblock prints
and the work of contemporary artist
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
. The style Beardsley developed was central to the new art movement called
art nouveau
, albeit highly controversial due to its often erotic nature. Despite the late Victorian era's misgivings, his obvious talent earned him work illustrating classics like Alexander Pope's “The Rape of the Lock,” and Oscar Wilde's
Salome
. For more work from Beardsley, check out
Aubrey Beardsley Drawings
, his
early work
, his
later work
,
Aubrey Beardsley
by Ross Robert Baldwin, and the
Last Letters of Aubrey Beardsley
.
By Thad Higa
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