Amongst the paraphernalia of Halloween this year, I noticed - in addition to witches’ hats, devils’ pitchforks, vampire fangs and warty hag noses - a whole range of masks that take their inspiration from the horror folk of literature: Count Dracula, Frankenstein’s Creature, the Hunchback of Notre Dame and Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde: all of whom represent far more than the mere fear engendered by the genuinely terrifying and ruthlessly violent aspects of their various sagas.
Each of these characters is a symbol of some facet of the fears and phobias that assail the human imagination - among them death and deformity and, in the case of those experimental doctors, Frankenstein and Jekyll, the potential threat of technology and science…
The warring psyches of Jekyll and Hyde as described by Robert Louis Stevenson, have never lost their fascination in the 120 years since the story was first published.
It has been the subject of many films and television versions and a number of illustrators have attempted to capture the terror of Henry Jekyll’s struggles to control his murderous alter ego. An artist who succeeded with dramatic brilliance was Mervyn Peake.
Peake illustrated Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde for the Folio Society in 1948 with a suite of drawings that demonstrate that the artist clearly understood the need to resist the temptation to merely draw the monster that was the flip-side of the man.
So, whilst he depicted the haunted Dr Henry Jekyll (above right) when it came to Mr Hyde, Peake chose only to hint at the horror, depicting him as scuttling off down alleyways (top left) dwarfed by the city he terrorizes yet, at the same time, casting a towering shadow; or - as shown in the book’s frontispiece - pausing beneath the guttering gas-lamp, the only indication of disease being the hunched shoulders and the unkempt demeanour.
Peake’s economy of design and simplicity of line - almost Japanese in style - and his use of a disturbingly sickly-yellow wash is inspired as can be seen in the illustration of Hyde before the mirror (itself almost animal in form) considering his shrunken frame draped in Jekyll’s too-large clothing….
Or, again, in a cunningly contrived drawing of Hyde slumped on a park bench in which the full grotesqueness of his brutish depravity still remains hidden from us but is noted by the upright Victorian gentleman who gives a disturbed backward glance as he passes by with his wife and child…
And so, when Mervyn Peake finally reveals Hyde to us in his bestial form - the simian features, the crab-clawed hand clutching the fateful, upraised phial - the effect is all the more terrible for our having waited for the revelation…
[All images: © The Mervyn Peake Estate]
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Signed Books: 2 – JOURNEY'S END
Among my collection of signed books are volumes given to me by writers who were also friends along with others by writers, actors and celebr...
-
The blog post below has earned me a nomination for the Most Fascinating Blog of 2012 Award : one of 93 blogs nominated by Librarians from ...
-
Among my collection of signed books are volumes given to me by writers who were also friends along with others by writers, actors and celebr...
-
Ray Bradbury’s The Golden Apples of the Sun has worn many different covers over the years… My original copy - sadly, long ago lost - was ...
2 comments:
Excellent Brian , I remember these illustrations vividly from my schooldays! I tracked down a copy of the Hulme Beaman version ( I have probably spelled his nam incorrectly but I mean the Larry The Lamb illustrator! ) a very distinctive almost expressionistic version I will send you illustrations via email when I find my copy!
Thanks, WTWC, you caused me to re-read this old post and to realise that - burst of immodesty coming up - it was quite well written!
I have seen two or three illustrations reproduced from the S G Hulme Beaman (spelled correctly!) edition but would love to see the remaining pictures sometime. Don't know how much you paid for it, but that book now sells for a lot of money!
Post a Comment