Back to Our Collections

William Heath Robinson

1872-1944

“Phoenaces who very much fear’d the moon should fall on earth”

Circa 1905

Pen & ink

22.25 x 15.5 ins, 56.5 x 39.4 cms.

Signed

About the Artist

William Heath Robinson began work in the tradition of Victorian book illustrators, following in the footsteps of his father.  He soon developed his flair for inventiveness and design and in the first fifteen years of the 20th century produced some iconic work.  Although now best known for his later humorous drawings of gadgets, through which his name entered the English language, it is in these early illustrations that his artistic genius is recorded.

About this Work

Original illustration to The Works of Rabelais, vol. II, The fourth book, Ch. XVII, p.103.

Published by Grant Richards 1904.

Signed and inscribed with title.

Framed with low-reflective uv protection glass.

The illustrations to Rabelais are widely regarded as Robinson’s best work.  Ironically, it was at the time a commercial disaster.  The publisher went bankrupt and Robinson was never paid.

Provenance

From the publisher’s archive