Favourite Aubrey Beardsley pieces.
1. The Battle of the Beaux and the Belles, 1897
2. Unpublished illustration from Salóme by Oscar Wilde, 1893
3. The Mirror of Love, 1895
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The Snow Queen by Hans Christian Andersen.
This particularly illustration is called “The Garden of the Woman Learned in Magic”. Gerda floats down the river in a little boat until she arrives at the witch’s cottage, where it is eternally summer.
There are many parallels of light and dark, or warm and cold, in this timeless story. Edmund Dulac does a perfect job of bringing out these parallels in his whimsical, exquisite illustrations.
Wouldn’t you like to live in her cottage?
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wish i was her honestly
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“She lives in a castle east of the sun and west of the moon, and there, too, is a princess, one with a nose three yards long.”
Kay Nielsen’s illustrations for the Norwegian fairytale “East of Sun and West of Moon”, circa 1914. Our tale begins in late autumn, and the snow is starting to fall. A family is sheltering from the storm one night, when a mysterious but kind white bear shows up at their doorstep.
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“I can't believe I'm real
When the ocean breaks, the wind comes near
And the wild only lasts as long as the hour feels.” - Ocean Arms by Florist
Illustration from The Tempest, 1908, by Edmund Dulac
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The Wild Swans by Hans Christian Andersen, circa 1838.
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