The Singing Bones
L**)
amazing sculptures that symbolize Grimm fairy tales
Shaun Tan is a remarkable and versatile artist-storyteller. His tales are usually modern and conveyed in drawings/paintings, but here he turns to the classic fairy tales collected by the Brothers Grimm and renders them in small sculptures inspired by Inuit art. These sculptures don’t merely illustrate the stories; they ARE the stories, with each tale summed up in a single, perfect visual image.Each sculpture is shown in a carefully composed photograph, with the sculpture isolated against a dark background. The photographs are all full-page and in color. Facing each photo is a page containing the name of the tale and a striking quotation from Tan’s retelling of it, amounting to no more than about 10 lines of fairly large type. The quotation and the sculpture together encapsulate the heart of the tale.For those who don’t remember the Grimm stories from their own childhoods, an “annotated index” at the end of the book provides a one-paragraph summary of the plot of each story. Rounding out the book is a foreword by Neil Gaiman and an afterword by Tan, the latter describing his inspiration and the materials he used.This book would be a perfect gift for anyone, child or adult, who enjoys fantasy and art and would like to see a fresh take on this familiar but archetypal material.
S**L
Hidden gem!
I accidentally happened upon this gem of a book. It made the perfect gift for my husband who is a ceramic artist. The artwork is uniuque and the quality of the book is exceptional. I only wish Tan had more published work like this. Maybe he will do more in the future?
T**I
How Far Can He Go?
Shaun Tan's creative genius and skills must have no boundaries, the little statues accompanied with excerpts from Grimm stories, grand idea. These statues or statuettes if you please are packed with meaning and intimacy it almost gives you pain while you observe them. Wish he sold them as well.
J**R
Great book
Love this book. I am an artist, so I appreciate the work. I don't think it is everybody's taste.
A**A
Mysterious figures illustrate fairy tales
Loving this book so much! It's another edge of Shaun Tan's creativeness!
D**G
Really wonderful stories, some I wished were longer but it's ...
Really wonderful stories, some I wished were longer but it's a book of short stories. Amazing art, and dark and original stories!
A**R
Good stories inspiring artwork
Good stories inspiring artwork
G**R
Beautiful Art Book
This is not your children's story book. It is a passionate artistic visual exploration of the mythology of our fairy tales. It is beautiful, dark and deep.
C**N
Hermosas figuras
Este ilustrados es de mi favoritos y me encantó que ahora nos ilustrara de otra manera con figuras de plastilina.
S**A
Be Enchanted
Shaun Tan is a visionary in the world of literature. In works such as Tales from Outer Suburbia , The Arrival , or Lost and Found , he takes readers into places that are all at once, strange, intimate, and disquieting. He amazes again in his latest work. The Singing Bones, are his 75 sculptures along with his selection of texts from the original Grimm fairy tales. He has transformed these fairy tales, formerly rooted in more Euro-English illustration forms – think Arthur Rackham, or Edmund Dulac – into something much more abstract and universal. The sculptures are less representative, and more suggestive. The texts he selected include familiar tales such as “Hansel and Gretel,” and obscure tales such as “The Boy Who Left Home to Find Out About Fear.”This hardcover edition has beautiful fabric endpapers, a foreward by Neil Gaiman, and introduction by Jack Zipes. The Singing Bones is a gem for any library. Tales from Outer SuburbiaThe ArrivalLost and Found
J**.
Not what you expect from Shaun Tan
Very disappointed, I almost feel ripped off. After the superb storytelling and fantastic artwork of The Lost Thing, or The Arrival, or The Red Tree, or Tales From Outer Suburbia, or Rules of Summer, this book is a bunch of excerpts from Grimm's fairy tales, with photographs of little "illustrative" sculptures which look like they are from a primary school art class. Anybody - even I - could do better interpretative sculptures, though I can't touch the level of creativity in Shaun Tan's illustrated stories.By the way, The Arrival may be one of the best books ever written, because it is written in every language ever devised - there isn't a word in the entire book - but the story is crystal clear. I doubt there is any other book like it.
M**E
Haunting, weird and beautiful
I love this book! I'd put it second only to The Arrival by the same author. Shaun Tan's vision is bizarre, but too inviting to be exactly grotesque. Each little sculpture is faced by a key paragraph from a story, and at the back there's a section summarising each story. This really adds to the book, because some of the stories are much more famous than others.Some of the images are extremely powerful (reflecting the fact that some of the stories are pretty dark), so I wouldn't recommend this for kids, but it is a great gift for any teenager or adult interested in art, fairy tales or the macabre.
M**R
A truly wonderful experience
A thoroughly mesmerising book. Having grown up with so many of the Grimm fairy tales and having seen some of Shaun Tan's work in the past, I was expecting an interesting experience. This book exceeded my expectations. Beautiful photography of Tan's miniature ode to the Grimm's legacy, this book sits proudly on my coffee table and is eagerly thrust under the noses of visiting friends who have relished in the visual style of the artist/author. Every one has been captivated by this beautiful book. Thank you Shaun.
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