Wild ancestor things

I had to post this image from my recent trip to the Cloisters in New York. The Cloisters hosts most of the medieval art belonging to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and this is an illumination from a medieval manuscript. Unfortunately I didn’t note the manuscript’s name, but I believe this particular illumination depicts a scene from Revelations. It’s probably meant to be scary, but I think it’s charming.

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The image captivates me because it seems so modern. The playful way the monsters’ bodies blend into one another as they cavort around the page, their copious teeth bristling and their orange eyes bugging — it looks just like the work of Maurice Sendak! Upon returning home and examining my copy of Where The Wild Things Are, I’m even more amazed at the family resemblance. What do you think?

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One Response to Wild ancestor things

  1. Joann says:

    Hey, I love that you find this charming, and I do, as well. I attended school for commercial art in the early 80’s. We were constantly reminded that “artists do not work in a vacuum.” We were told to go to the library and to look to our surroundings to find images for inspiration. While Sendak may or may not have seen this image and used it, (or one like it,) as inspiration, the likelihood seems high that he may have, given what I know about commerical illustration. I love Sendak, too.

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