| Lee, Alan |
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At a time when reverence for the illustrators of the Golden Age was uncommon, Lee crafted his style from a mixture of 50 and 60 year old influences. The works of Arthur Rackham and Charles Robinson played important roles in his studies and direction. Like these artists, Lee's medium was watercolor in a classically romantic style. Lee's lack of a black bounding line for his images puts some in mind of Edmund Dulac, another artist from the turn-of-the-century with whom he is compared.
The second example of his pre-Faeries work that I've been able to find is the 1976 The Golden Book of the Mysterious. This 144-page American title features Lee's watercolors on almost every page. With the whole realm of the unknown as subject matter, Lee was free to exercise his imagination. The results are stunning paintings (see left) that feature subject matter, like space shuttles, airplanes and aliens, that he never tackled again.
The Arthurian motif of The Mabinogion was followed in 1984 by Castles. This established, if not the trend, at least his penchant for the British and European romance and fairy tale. It also showcased the hitherto seldom-seen world of his pencil art. See the example above right. It exemplified the totality of his art and his choices of when to use the medium paid off handsomely in emotional dividends. The book was designed and edited by David Larkin. While the pencil drawings in Castles were new to most of his fans, a small subset of 750 had studied them in 1983 in a large, lavish portfolio entitled, The Drawings of Alan Lee. Eight drawings were presented in an impressive boxed format. They were reproduced directly from the originals via the best techniques available. The Inheritance, right, is one of them. Signed and numbered, the portfolio is very uncommon today. Also in 1984, Lee broke into the American paperback market with the covers for Dennis L. McKiernan's Iron Tower trilogy (left) published by Signet. Two Ursula K. Le Guin titles, The Eye of the Heron and Orsinian Tales were also in 1984 from Bantam. The only other example I've found is Brokedown Palace in 1986,
The Moon's Revenge in 1987 was
followed by Merlin Dreams in 1988. Like Castles, this featured
pencil drawings amongst the watercolors and was lavishly and
To celebrate the 100th anniversary of the
birth of Tolkien, a new 1200 page edition of The Lord of the Rings
was planned. The illustrator of choice was Alan Lee. With 50 color plates
(one sample at left), featuring some of his most precise and beautiful work
to date, the book was a stunning artistic and commercial success. He did all
new illustrations for the 1993 J.R.R. Tolkien calendar and a
new edition of The Hobbit in 1997. He was so connected to the
material that when David Day wrote a book on the significance of the ring in
myth and In addition to tackling Tolkien, he also did profusely illustrated versions of two much older classics: The Iliad (Black Ships Before Troy - 1993) and the Odyssey (The Wanderings of Odysseus - 1995), both adapted by Rosemary Sutcliff. Lee was the recipient of the Kate Greenaway award in 1993 for Black Ships. The award is given annually for the most distinguished work in the illustration of children's books published in the United Kingdom. If that's not sufficient, he works as a set designer on films (Legend - 1985, Erik the Viking - 1989, Merlin - 1998) and will feature prominently in the design of the upcoming adaptations of Tolkien that are in the works. Between films, he still lives and works in the same small village on the edge of Dartmoor near Devon where he and Brian Froud retired to create Faeries. Brian and Wendy Froud still live there, too, along with other artists and writers of myth and magic. Perhaps there's something in the water...
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Information supplied by: http://www.bpib.com/illustrat/lee.htm |