I've found my new favorite art book. I've been coveting this book for quite awhile now, but didn't want to fork over the $40. Now that I've seen it, I easily would spend $40 on it. Thanks to eBay though, I didn't have to :p Charles Vess has long been one of my favorite modern artist. He competes with Dave McKean, John Jude Palencar, Yoshitaka Amano, Kinuko Y Craft and Yoshitomo Nara for that title. But he's way up there.
What sets Vess apart from all of these other artists is his complete ability to capture fantasy like no other artist. He captures it as if he's visited Faerie himself. As if he's crossed the wall and spent some time there. There's a certain delicateness to his work. The colors, the lines, the tiny details, the emotions that you FEEL when you look at a piece of his art are just magical. There's really no other word for it aside from magical.
I first discovered Charles Vess when he illustrated Neil Gaiman's Stardust. I remember thinking to myself that I was looking at Arthur Rackham illustrations, one of my favorite artists of all time. I couldn't imagine someone having the talent it takes to put so much story into one painting. I want to hug every painting of Vess' that I see. It's one of my goals in life to one day have an original of his. Right now I have a print of Yvaine from Stardust singing with her sisters that I want framed in my house...but it's not an original :p
Anyway, let's get to this book! Drawing Down the Moon is an amazing piece of work! It's a treasure for any fan of Vess! It chronicles his entire career from high school til today featuring work that's never been seen by the public before. It covers everything he's done before and it's presented on beautiful paper, with translucent sheets separating the different sections.
There are sections covering his comic book work, novel work, solo work, independent pieces, pieces he did for posters and local theaters, commissions, sketches, and he ends the book with a gorgeous fairy parade where he takes you through his whole process from original quick sketch to finished painting.
The best part about this is Vess' commentary. He talks extensively about many of the pieces here. The motivations behind them, what was going on in his life when he created them, the memories associated with the pieces, techniques used to create them. I loved hearing him talk about collaborating with some of my other favorite authors like Neil Gaiman, Charles DeLint, Terri Windling, Jane Yolen and Ellen Datlow just to name a few. Just a masterpiece of a book really. I almost want a second copy so I can go to town with an exacto knife and frame some of these pictures!
Here, have a look for yourself at some of his gorgeous work. Click any of these pictures to enlarge them. And if you're an art fan, do yourself a favor and pick this one up!
7 comments:
Yeah, I love these, too. One day I will have this book!
I have a number or artists books but the problem is how seldom they are pulled out to look at once you've seen them a few times..but I know you will enjoy this book.
and ummm, watch out..ebay can be very addictive.
I agree with you 100% about Charles Vess's ability to capture fantasy realms, particularly Faerie. His paintings are so detailed, and infused with such a sense of motion, that I feel like I could step right into them.
Remarkably, I hadn't heard of this book before. My library has it, so I know what I'll be reading in the near future!
I love getting a history on art pieces. It makes you look at them entirely differently sometimes :D Just lovely
These are SO beautiful!! I really need to find a copy of this book!
Oh, those are lovely! I particularly like the painting with the cats, naturally. And, the last one about reading being an adventure worth sharing. Cool.
Couldn't agree more, this is one amazing art book. Jeff and I often comment on artists that deserve top quality art books representing their work and Vess was one of those up until this collection came out. It is a perfect size to showcase his gorgeous work. And I love it when artists actually share stuff about their work rather than it being solely the images themselves and this book excels in that area.
If a person can't own a copy this is one to at least track down through the library to view. It is a beautiful collection.
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