Showing posts with label wood engraving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wood engraving. Show all posts

Thursday, 18 July 2024

The Scottish fairy tale 'Rashie Coat' illustrated by Joan Hassall

 



For more than a decade from the mid 1970s the artist Joan Hassall was a neighbour of my family in the Yorkshire Dales village of Malham. I was twenty in 1976 when she inherited Priory Cottage in the village, and she lived there until her death in 1988 at the age of 82. Joan was a skilled wood engraver who illustrated many, many books (you can read more about her life here). I was a bit too young to be a friend, but I knew her as a much-loved village figure, with her thick pebble glasses, beautiful smile and layers of flower-patterned skirts. She played a number of musical instruments and for some time was organist at the parish church of St Michael the Archangel. She attended our wedding there in 1987 – not to play the organ on that occasion, just to be there – and we can never forget how she came up to us after the ceremony, and with the sweetest smile said simply: 'Be happy!' It was a genuine blessing if ever there was one, and a command we've done our best to obey.

I have two or three books illustrated by Joan, and for me as a lover of fairy tales this one is special. She was commissioned to design and produce a series of chapbooks for the Saltire Society which was set up in 1936 to ‘promote and celebrate the uniqueness of Scottish culture and heritage’. The books are tiny – approximately 13 x 9cm – but the work is exquisite. This is number 12, published 1951. It is the old Scottish fairy tale of ‘Rashie Coat’ and I guess, though I cannot be sure, that the elegant signature on the flyleaf is Joan’s own writing. She was a fine artist and a lovely person. I hope you'll enjoy her work. 









Picture credit

Portrait of Joan Hassall see wikipedia:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Joan_Hassall.jpg