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Wendy Froud

    Wendy Froud crea bambole fin dall'infanzia, popolando il suo mondo interiore con creature mitologiche come satiri e fate. Questa passione si è evoluta nella sua carriera artistica, dove ha ottenuto riconoscimenti per il suo lavoro nei film di Jim Henson come "Labyrinth" e "Dark Crystal", realizzando burattini e sculture. Le sue bambole e figure uniche, ispirate al fantasy e al folklore, sono molto ricercate dai collezionisti di tutto il mondo. Froud crede che le sue creazioni servano come compagne per viaggi personali, infondendo energia curativa e fungendo da indicatori per i mondi semi-dimenticati che portiamo dentro di noi.

    Brian and Wendy Froud's The Pressed Fairy Journal of Madeline Cot
    The Art of Wendy Froud
    Brian Froud's Faeries' Tales
    Trolls
    • Trolls

      • 144pagine
      • 6 ore di lettura

      Not since Brian Froud’s conceptual design work with Jim Henson on the classic films The Dark Crystal and Labyrinth has he created a faerie world with such imagination, dimension, depth, and detail. Trolls features new and classic work by both Brian and his wife, Wendy, woven together along with artifacts and symbols of the natural world to create a fascinating revelation about the world of trolls. The book explores trolls and troll culture, revealing their philosophies, their home life, and their world attitudes through their tales, mythology, and archaeology. Trolls affirms that trolls are real, that they have lived and are living now. The texture of the world and the deeply immersive, cinematic images will appeal to the legions of fantasy—and Froud—fans.

      Trolls
    • Following in the footsteps of Trolls, Brian and Wendy Froud lead readers deep into the world of faeries. Humans throughout history have always had special relationships and bonds with faeries, whether loving and helpful or at times destructive. This new book explores that complex relationship and the liminal state between the human and faery world where interaction occurs.In Brian Froud’s Faeries’ Tales, readers encounter individual faeries, each with a story to uncover, as told by the faeries themselves. Many of the stories are familiar to humans, but the “true” story is told by the faeries. Similar to the Trolls fragments, the faeries’ tales are coupled with portraits and interspersed with drawings and studies of the mysterious and enchanting folk who travel back and forth between the human world and theirs.

      Brian Froud's Faeries' Tales