SIGNED BY ARTHUR RACKHAM
(RACKHAM, Arthur). “The birds show Peter Pan how they fly a kite.” Color plate signed in pencil on the mount. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1906. Four-color photolithographic print (7-1/2 by 10-1/2 inches), handsomely framed, entire piece measures 18 by 21-1/2 inches.
Original color plate from Rackham’s 1906 limited edition of Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens, signed in pencil by Rackham on the mount.
Peter Pan wasn’t always the boy from Never Land who lost his shadow and fought Captain Hook. The character’s first name “came from Peter Llewelyn Davies, who when still a baby became the subject of stories told by Barrie to [Peter’s older brothers]. According to these stories Peter, like all babies, had once been a bird and could still fly out of his nursery window and back to Kensington Gardens, because his mother had forgotten to weigh him at birth. From these stories came the ‘Peter Pan’ chapters in The Little White Bird [1902], afterwards re-issued with Arthur Rackham illustrations as Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens” (Carpenter, 177). This image of the infant Peter learning about flight is taken from the 1906 limited edition of Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens. It is among the 12 pictures considered to be Rackham’s personal favorites— later issued as part of the sumptuous Peter Pan Portfolio (1912). See: Riall, 113; Ray, 100 Outstanding Illustrated Books Published in England 99.
Fine condition, handsomely framed.