
I referred to the illustrations I have been doing in a previous post. I have enjoyed doing these, and as always when you try something different, you tend to surprise yourself.
John the author, a professional actor, whose tour has been interrupted by lockdown, which as everyone knows has closed theatres throughout the land, produced delightful sketches and memories on social media. Such was the response, that he collected them together into an anthology. I was asked to provide illustrations for the various chapters, just as visual footnotes, which I hope has done justice to the book.
The works of Shakespeare, as with many other well known pieces, crop up often. The Scottish play is no exception. Why is it unlucky to mention that play by name? Theatre folk are notoriously superstitious. Who else would say “break a leg” to someone just going on? I don’t know but must check it out before going further
One view put forward is that Shakespeare used actual spells during the witch’s incantations, by which I mean spells that witches used. I am not able to say whether they worked or not. It has also been pointed out that MacBeth, being a short play, was put on, at times of emergency, such as sickness amongst the cast. It came to be associated with misfortune. That sounds more feasible, but we don’t really know
As you can see the three witch mice are in full incantation. They are wearing their masks or their ‘blinds’, and they are looking convincing. If they are not convincing, they certainly look frightening. I wonder if we shall see them in print. I believe there is interest from two publishers, but of course it will depend on the deal. We shall have to see
Changing tack for the moment, I sold Horses in the Wetlands yesterday to a buyer in America. Always an extra buzz when the sale is international, I’m not sure why. Anyway the picture was picked up at lunchtime, and is probably going through Heathrow as I write this. In a year when real exhibitions were not possible, online sales have proved a godsend . I will leave with a reminder of the image

- Alhambra
- Amsterdam
- Ancient English Ports
- Ancient Greek Temples
- Andalucia
- Animals
- Arles
- Art Exhibitions
- Art Nouveau
- Artfinder
- Arts and Crafts
- Aubrey Beardsley
- ball Point Pen
- Barcelona
- Barges
- Baroque
- Basilica of Sacre-Coeur de Paris
- Bath
- Beach
- Bicycles
- Boat Paintings
- Book Illustration
- Bosham
- Bosham Harbour
- Bosphorus
- Brittany
- Buildings/Architecture
- c13 woollen industry in Britain
- Camargue
- Camden Art Group
- Canal Bridges
- Canals
- Castles
- Cathedrals
- cats
- Cefalu
- Chichester
- Chinoiserie
- Christmas Street Scene
- CLASSICAL aRCHITECTURE
- Competitions
- Conkers
- Corfu
- Cornwall
- Correcting mistakes in watercolour
- Country Churches
- Country House Hotels
- Country Houses
- Danube
- David Hockney
- Devon
- Dewdrop on Leaf Detail
- dog portraits
- Donkeys
- Dorich House Museum
- Dragons
- Eagle Comic
- Education
- Egypt
- Egypt Equine Aid
- Eifel Mountains
- Elizabethan Country Houses
- English Country Gardens
- Equipment and work space
- Ferry Boats
- Figures in Streetscape
- Fishing Boats
- Flamingos
- Florence
- Fountains
- Fountains Abbey
- France
- French Impressionists
- Frog
- Frogs
- Gardens/Floral
- Georgian Architecture
- Germany
- Gondolas
- Granada
- Guildford in Surrey, UK
- Harry Potter
- Henry Moore
- Holland
- Horses
- House Portrait
- Hungarian Cattle Country
- India
- Islamic Art and Architecture
- Istanbul
- Italian Chapel
- Italy
- Jane Austen
- Kew gardens
- Kew Gardens
- Knights Templar
- Langstone Mill
- Leatherhead Theatre
- Life in the 1950s
- Light and Dark
- Lightbox, Woking
- Lock Gates
- London
- London Docklands
- Marinas
- Maritime History
- Marsala
- Mary Wollstonecraft
- Marzamemi
- Medieval Undercroft
- Mediterranean
- Mice
- Mosques
- National Trust
- North Sea
- Notre Dame de Paris
- Opera
- Orkney
- Ostrich
- Oxford
- Pagoda
- Painshill Park, Cobham
- Painting Snow
- Pallant House Art Gallery, Chichester
- Paris
- Paul Nash
- Payne's Grey
- Pelican
- Period House
- Photography
- Plas Newydd, Anglesey
- Ponte Vecchio
- Portsmouth Harbour
- Post Impressionists
- Pre Raphaelites
- Preliminary Sketch
- Properties of Watercolour Paints
- Ragusa
- Railway Stations
- Reviews
- Rex Whistler
- Rome
- Royal Surrey Hospital
- Sagrada Familia
- Sailing Boats
- Saxon England
- Schools
- Scotland
- Sculpture
- Seascapes
- Sicily
- Sickert
- Sidney Sime Gallery
- Simon Gudgeon
- South Africa
- Southampton Art Gallery
- Spain
- St Katherine's Dock
- St Thomas a Becket
- Still Life
- Sunset
- Surrealism
- Surrey Villages
- Swans
- Syracuse
- Tate Art Gallery
- Terra Cotta
- Textbooks
- Textured Finishes
- Thames
- Tower Bridge
- Townscapes
- Transylvania
- Tudor Houses
- Turner
- Uncategorized
- Van Gogh
- Venice
- Vignette Style
- War Artists
- War Graves
- Water Birds
- Watercolour Painting
- Waterscapes
- Watts Gallery
- Wet-in-wet
- Wey Navigation
- William Blake
- William Payne
- Windmills
- Winter Street Scene
- Wisley Gardens
- Working to Commission
- World War 1
- World War 2
- World War 2 Architecture
- Yorkshire
The mice witches look (please forgive me for this) kinda comically frightening, and I think that’s good if it’s illustrations for kid’s books. Glad to hear about the sale. Had I foretold that one?
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You may have done. You often do with great accuracy
My witches I think are manga in style, which is comic book but read by adults
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The drawing is overall good, especially the 3D effect.
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Thank you Farzana
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The mice-witches are great fun. I love their hairy legs in particular. I had no idea that MacBeth was a short play. It didn’t feel like that we we were studying it for O level English!
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So I am told or so I read, but I’m no expert. Definitely it was rolled out by theatre companies at the time, when they were stuck.
The author has appointed a publisher, he told me yesterday. Exciting times. Now I,m worried that my drawings are up to standard
We shall see
Thanks
Emma
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