Print Name
Monster in the Lake
Print Description
Theodor Kittelsen : Monster in the Lake - Illustration for Troldskab Christiania, 1892. Internet Archive
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Theodor Kittelsen : Monster in the Lake - Illustration for Troldskab Christiania, 1892. Internet Archive
Goya : The sleep of reason produces monsters, 1799. Alternate Title: El sueño de la razon produce monstruos. Portfolio: Los Caprichos Plate: 43. Francisco Goya y Lucientes (Spain, Fuendetodos, 1746-1828) Spain, 1799
Prints; etchings Etching and aquatint Sheet: 12 × 8 in. (30.48 × 20.32 cm) Image: 7 1/8 × 4 3/4 in. (18.1 × 12.07 cm) ( LACMA - 63.11.43).
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Demon in Chains in the Style of Muhammad Siya Qalam (Iranian) - c. 1453
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Print made by William O'Keefe, active 1794–1807
Title : 'A Vision, Vide, the Monster of Slaughter, The Distress of Nations; Deluge of Blodd Date' - 1796
Mythological Bird, anonymous - 1750.
Rijksmuseum.
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Satirical cartoon about the beginnings of the Dutch Trading Company, 1824
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Grasshoppers and Fantasy Creature with Wings and Webbed Feet by Nicolaes de Bruyn - 1594
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The Famous Gargantua by Unknown Artist - late 18th or early 19th century.
Gargantua was a fictional character from Francois Rabelais’ 16th century novel pentalogy titled The Life of Gargantua and of Pantagruel whose popularity was centered upon its liberal use of satire, absurdity, and crude humor. The print is one of the many images of Epinal, a collection of popular prints produced by Jean-Charles Pellerin and later by his company. The low cost prints provided a broad population with stories and news, visualizing historic events, classics, and other entertainments.
- Yale
£65.00 GBP
Vignette with bearded monster for the Mercure de France, Johannes Josephus Aarts, - 1900
The Mercure de France was originally a French gazette and literary magazine first published in the 17th century, but after several incarnations has evolved as a publisher, and is now part of the Éditions Gallimard publishing group.
The gazette was published from 1672 to 1724 (with an interruption in 1674–1677) under the title Mercure galant (sometimes spelled Mercure gallant) (1672–1674) and Nouveau Mercure galant (1677–1724). The title was changed to Mercure de France in 1724. The gazette was briefly suppressed (under Napoleon) from 1811 to 1815 and ceased publication in 1825. The name was revived in 1890 for both a literary review and (in 1894) a publishing house initially linked with the symbolist movement. Since 1995 Mercure de France has been part of the Éditions Gallimard publishing group.
£45.00 GBP
Seated Fantasy Creatures by Johannes Josephus Aarts - 1881-1934
Ii no Hayata slaying a monster at the Imperial Palace, Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, 1890.
Ii no Hataya fighting the monster he shot earlier with an arrow from a black cloud. The monster, a nue, has a monkey head, the back of a badger, the claws of a tiger and a snake's tail. - Rijksmusuem
Giovanni da Modena, The Inferno (detail) - 1410, Basilica di San Petronio, Bologna.
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Fantastische waterdieren, onder andere zeepaard by Nicolaes de Bruyn, Netherlands, 1581 - 1656, hand coloured engraving Rijksmuseum
Hosai Shugetsu (Japanese, active c. 1880-90) : Amago buyuden, Colour woodblock print . Art Institute of Chicago resized
Harry R. Hopps: Propaganda poster shows a terrifying gorilla with a helmet labeled "militarism" holding a bloody club labeled "kultur" and a half-naked woman as he stomps onto the shore of America (Library of Congress). Date: 1918.
Wilhelm Trübner (February 3, 1851 – December 21, 1917) was a German realist painter of the circle of Wilhelm Leibl. Gorgon was painted in 1891.
The Latest Thing in Nightmares by John. S Pughe (1870-1909), a commentary cartoon with eyeglasses and teeth resembling President Theodore Roosevelt. Original from Library of Congress. Published in 1906.
The Deformed Polyp Floated on the Shores, a Sort of Smiling and Hideous Cyclops by the Flower (1883) by Odilon Redon. Original from the National Gallery of Art.
Walt McDougall - The Salt Lake Herald., August 24, 1902, ‘It Was The Spookissimus’.
John Tenniel : The Jabberwocky "The Jabberwocky". An illustration to the poem Jabberwocky ,first published in Lewis Carroll’s ‘Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There’ - 1871.
Walt McDougall : The Salt Lake herald., February 22, 1903, ‘The Hierophant Was Petrifying’.