Biographical Materials
H. J. Ford, who is perhaps best known for his collaboration with Andrew Lang on the series of twelve Coloured Fairy Books (1889-1910), had a somewhat unusual career for an illustrator. Born in London, where he spent most of his life, he attended Repton and won a scholarship to Clare College, Cambridge, from which he graduated with a first-class degree in classics. After graduation, he studied at the Slade school of Art with Alphonse Legros and the Bushey school of Art with Sir Hubert Herkomer. A friend of Sir Edward Burne-Jones, he exhibited history paintings and landscapes at the Royal Academy between 1892 and 1903. In addition creating illustrations for the Fairy Books, he also produced many historical subjects set from the middle ages to the eighteenth-century for Lang's The Red True Story Book (1895) and other works. He also illustrated The Arabian Nights Entertainments (1895) and Pilgrim's Progress (1921).
Fairy and Fantasy Illustrations
- Sir Mordred
- The Six Brothers Changed into Swans by their Stepmother
- And then her dress
- The Witch Maiden Sees the Young Man under a Tree
- The Youth Secures the Dragon
- The Emperor Comes to See His New Clothes
- The Fisherman Brings the Crab on the Golden Cushion
- The Prince Throws the Apple to the Princess
- The Dragon Carries off the Three Soldiers
- The Hunter is Transformed into a Donkey
- [Prince Saphir looks in the Magic Mirror]
- The Seven-Headed Serpent
- The Herd boy Binds up the Giant's Foot
- Rosalie Guarded by the Genii
- Here you shall remain chained until you die
- My Enemy is Given unto my Hands
- The Princess and the Eagle in the Flowery Meadow
- The Miller Sees the Nixy of the Mill-Pond
- A wave swept the spinning-wheel from the bank
- Lagree gives 2 bottles to Fairer-than-a-fairy
- Fairer-than-a-fairy summons the Rainbow
- The the youth swung his mighty sword
- The Black Girl Stops the Witch with a Bit of Rock
- The Indian finds his wife sitting by the fire
- The Witch Persuades the Queen to Bathe
- Militza and her maidens in the garden
- Iwanich casts the fish into the water
- Iwanich Dashes the Magician to the Ground
- Martin Extinguishes the Flames
- The Dragons Dancing
- In the Winter When Everything is Dead
- The Comrades in the Flying Ship Meet the Drinker
- Simpleton's Army before the King
- Maiden, Are You Warm?
- The Sun Hero Guards the Apples of the Sun
- Who's There?
- The Comb Grows into a Forest
- Gee-up, My Five Horses! I'll See to Your Horses
- The Woman pushes Prince Ring into the Cask
- A True Princess
- The Irishman arrives at the Blue Mountains
- Thumbelina Rides on a Water-Lily Leaf
- We Will Call You Mayblossom
- The Kitchenmaid Listens to the Nightingale
- The True Nightingale Sings to the Emperor
- The Story of Caliph Stork (1)
- The Story of Caliph Stork (2)
- Rosanella
- Sylvain and Jocosa
- Prince Narcissus and the Princess Potentilla
- Prince Featherhead and the Princess Celandine
- Heart of Ice
- King Kojata
- The Story of the Three Bears
- The Twelve Huntsmen
- The Riddle
- The Golden Mermaid
Historical Subjects
- In the Borghese Gardens [Prince Charles] practiced that royal game of golf
- James More wounded at Prestonpans
- The poor boy fell, mortally wounded
- The 'Rout of Moy'
- Manco Capac and Mama Ocllo Huaco, the children of the sun, come from Lake Titicaca to govern and civilize the tribes of Peru
- Sometimes he would find a party searching for him quite close at hand
- One Englishman at least died well
- I will send you a champion whom you will fear more than you fear me
- Molly takes her husbands's place
- I regarded myself as a horseman who is trying to win the steeplechase
- The Pitcairn Islanders on board the English frigate
- In the Borghese Gardens [Prince Charles] practiced that royal game of golf
- James More wounded at Prestonpans
Bibliography
Fantastic Illustration and Design in Britain, 1850-1930. Providence, Rhode Island School of Design, 1979.
Lang, Andrew, Ed. The Red True Story Book. London: Longman, Green, 1895.
Lang, Andrew, Ed. The Pink Fairy Book. London: Longman, Green, 1901.
Lang, Andrew, Ed. The Yellow Fairy Book. New York: Grosset and Dunlap, n.d.; London: Longman, Green, 1894.
Peppin, Brigid. Fantasy: The Golden Age of Fantastic Illustration. New York: New American Library, 1976. (Also Watson-Guptill, 1975.)
Last modified 22 February 2005