Olive Cockerell, Orginal Illustration for the Book Cover ~ The Wind Fairies and Other Tales, c. 1900,

$1,285.00

Olive Cockerell, Orginal Illustration for the Book Cover ~ The Wind Fairies and Other Tales, ink over pencil on thin board, 8 ¾ x 12 ½ inches, c. 1900, Condition- Very Good (pin-holes in the corners, not affecting the drawing), $1285 Olive Juliet Cockerell, (1869 - 1910) was an English illustrator for fairy stories, including The Queen of the Goblins, 1892, and was a close friend to the family of William Morris. The Wind Fairies and Other Tales (first published in 1900) was authored by Mary De Morgan, who was a notable influence on Hans Christian Andersen. The book was dedicated to Margaret Burne-Jones's children (the grandchildren of painter Edward Burne-Jones), who were the first to have heard the tales

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Olive Cockerell, Orginal Illustration for the Book Cover ~ The Wind Fairies and Other Tales, ink over pencil on thin board, 8 ¾ x 12 ½ inches, c. 1900, Condition- Very Good (pin-holes in the corners, not affecting the drawing), $1285 Olive Juliet Cockerell, (1869 - 1910) was an English illustrator for fairy stories, including The Queen of the Goblins, 1892, and was a close friend to the family of William Morris. The Wind Fairies and Other Tales (first published in 1900) was authored by Mary De Morgan, who was a notable influence on Hans Christian Andersen. The book was dedicated to Margaret Burne-Jones's children (the grandchildren of painter Edward Burne-Jones), who were the first to have heard the tales

Olive Cockerell, Orginal Illustration for the Book Cover ~ The Wind Fairies and Other Tales, ink over pencil on thin board, 8 ¾ x 12 ½ inches, c. 1900, Condition- Very Good (pin-holes in the corners, not affecting the drawing), $1285 Olive Juliet Cockerell, (1869 - 1910) was an English illustrator for fairy stories, including The Queen of the Goblins, 1892, and was a close friend to the family of William Morris. The Wind Fairies and Other Tales (first published in 1900) was authored by Mary De Morgan, who was a notable influence on Hans Christian Andersen. The book was dedicated to Margaret Burne-Jones's children (the grandchildren of painter Edward Burne-Jones), who were the first to have heard the tales