Awaking Beauty - - The Art Of Eyvind Earle.pdf

Artist Eyvind Earle Made Disney's “Sleeping Beauty ... - Artsy

and his later success in fine art. The book and accompanying exhibition showcase Earle’s signature style, characterized by medieval-inspired landscapes, intense verticality, and meticulous detail. Explore the retrospective at The Walt Disney Family Museum Awaking Beauty - The Art Of Eyvind Earle.pdf

"Awaking Beauty: The Art of Eyvind Earle" is the official 176-page exhibition catalog for The Walt Disney Family Museum's 2017 retrospective, detailing the artist's seven-decade career. The book showcases over 250 works, covering his early watercolors, his work on "Sleeping Beauty," and his later, signature fine art landscapes. For more details, visit Simon & Schuster Eyvind Earle Publishing Awaking Beauty: The Art of Eyvind Earle Artist Eyvind Earle Made Disney's “Sleeping Beauty

Eyvind Earle's artistic style, characterized by its elegance, sophistication, and whimsy, would become synonymous with Disney's Golden Age. His designs for Cinderella (1950), Alice in Wonderland (1951), and Peter Pan (1953) exemplified his mastery of color, composition, and character design. Earle's work was not only visually stunning but also imbued with a sense of storytelling and emotional depth. Explore the retrospective at The Walt Disney Family

Awaking Beauty: The Art of Eyvind Earle | Exhibition Catalog

The central thesis of any examination of Earle’s work must begin with his distinctive stylistic synthesis. When Earle was assigned the role of color stylist and background artist for Sleeping Beauty , he undertook a radical departure from the soft, rounded, and sentimentally realistic style that had defined Disney’s previous features like Snow White or Cinderella . Instead, Earle looked backward to advance forward. He drew heavy inspiration from the Limbourg brothers and the Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry, incorporating the flattened perspectives and vertical preoccupations of Gothic tapestries.