I shared my experience with working on a
papercut cover for „The Kairos Mechanism“ recently on my website, and talked
about my process at the wonderful lost weekend at David Diaz’ house that Jen and Debbie already posted about. I have been fascinated with black and white art
for a long time, and in view of the Tomie dePaola competition deadline coming
up and the fact that the illustration has to be black and white, I would like
to share some black and white art that I have come across and been very inspired
by:
Arthur Rackham: illustration for "Sleeping Beauty", 1920 |
Arthur Rackham: I have been a great admirer of
his work for a long time, but only recently found out that he illustrated two fairytales,
„Sleeping Beauty“ and „Cinderella“, in black and white silhouettes. His artwork
is intricately layered, I especially loved this illustration from Sleeping
beauty, where he manages to
show different layers of depth only with black and white. The image is elegant, beautiful and holds
loads of storytelling and action while managing to appear clear and simple at
the same time, incredible!
A still from Lotte Reininger's "The Adventures of Prince Achmed", 1926 |
Lotte Reininger: She was a German papercut artist and animator in the first half of the 20th century and completed the first full length animated film, „The Adventures of Achmed“, in 1926. Inspired by traditional eastern shadow theater, she invented a technique to adapt silhouette for animated film. Her figures, backgrounds and compositions are beautiful, and it’s amazing how she can convey emotion and acting with her silhouette figures. Here is an excerpt from „The Adventures of Achmed“:
and her version of „Cinderella“:
Karel Zeman: he was a czech artist, animator
and director who experimented with stop motion animation, artwork, mix of
painted backgrounds and real backgrounds, stilization and very creative special
effects. For many of his feature films he drew inspiration from artists who had
illustrated the books he was turning into movies, such as Gustave Doré’s
illustrations for „Baron Munchhausen“, or Zdenek Burian’s illustrations for
„Journey to the Center of the Earh“, thus creating a unique artistic vision.
Gustave Doré: illustration for "Baron Munchhausen", 1866 |
I hope you will enjoy these examples!
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Andrea Offermann recently illustrated Kate Milford’s „The Broken Lands“, Cornelia Funke’s „Ghost Knight“ and Sonya Hartnett’s „The Midnight Zoo“. You can see her work at www.andreaoffermann.com .
I love Lotte Reiniger and share my DVD of Prince Achmed with everyone I can. It has a great biography of her that's inspiring to anyone who thinks they are too old to be creative. Thanks for showing all this wonderful black and white art.
ReplyDeleteThese are great! Are you also familiar with Fiep Westendorp, and her illustrations for the Jip en Janneke books? I love her silhouettes! If not, check out this site dedicated to her: http://www.fiepwestendorp.nl/fiepamsterdam/
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for sharing these beautiful artists with us, Andrea! Really great post!!
ReplyDelete