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  1. There has been much conjecture as to Tenniel’s model for his portrayal of this character: some of his contemporaries believed it to be his colleague, Horace (nicknamed Ponny) Mayhew, but Tenniel himself has also been recognised as a valid candidate, as hinted at in Linley Sambourne’s ‘Good Sir John!’ design of 1893, not to mention Tenniel’s own self-portrait of 1889.

  2. An exhibition of original engravings of Sir John Tenniel’s illustrations for Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass (1872). Tenniel’s drawings are considered to be his finest and most enduring achievement. They must also rank among the world’s best-known children’s illustrations.

  3. Through the Looking-Glass pictures. B elow you can find all original illustrations from Through the Looking-Glass and what Alice found there, drawn by John Tenniel. Click on the thumbnail images to enlarge the illustration and/or browse through them. Or download all illustrations at once (zip-file). Pictures from "Through the Looking-Glass ...

  4. 7 de jul. de 2014 · In the 150 years since Sir John Tenniel’s original illustrations and the century since Arthur Rackham’s pioneering reimagining, the Carroll classic has sprouted everything from a pop-up book adaptation to a witty cookbook to a quantum physics allegory, and hundreds of artists around the world have reimagined it with remarkable creative vision.

  5. Beyond Wonderland. Tenniel Sir John 1820-1914 Cartoonist & Illustrator. LIFE Photo Collection. Perhaps primarily known today as the illustrator of Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There (1871), Sir John Tenniel was, in his own lifetime, highly regarded as the chief ...

  6. After Sir John Tenniel (British, London 1820–1914 London) 1863 She hath reach'd a tree whose head, Still is green, whose heart is dead (in "Good Words for 1864," opp. p. 542)

  7. 9 de mai. de 2021 · John Tenniel's Natural Fantasy: The White Rabbit. The Textual Alice and the Alice of Illustration. Alice through the Magnifying Glass, Visual and Verbal Interplay in Wonderland. Representing Alice: John Tenniel's Collaboration with Charles Dodgson. Alice in Blunderland (Alice reappears in a Punch cartoon)