Description
This volume in Thames & Hudson*s The Illustrators series showcases the work of Walter Crane, one of the most influential children*s book creators of his generation. Crane transformed the illustration of children*s books with his bold outlines, jeweled colors, and vivid characters. While many knew Crane for fantastical children*s tales, he was also a leading voice in the aesthetic and Arts and Crafts movements and a powerful socialist.
Along with Randolph Caldecott and Kate Greenaway, Crane pioneered the child-in-the-garden motifs that would characterize nursery rhymes and children*s stories for decades. Craftsman and visionary at once, he created powerful images for the new socialism in the latter part of the nineteenth century.
Distinguished biographer Jenny Uglow expertly narrates a fascinating study of how Crane*s art and politics developed from his childhood love of Pre-Raphaelite painting and the influence of the ideas of William Morris and other progressive thinkers of the time. This book is a brilliant record of an artist who blended styles and influences like no one before him.
80 illustrations






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