Ernest Nister: The Sentimental
Sensibility
Though primarily involved with his successful color-printing
business, publisher and printer Ernest Nister (1842-1909) specialized
in colored toy and movable picture books. Operating in both Nuremberg
and London in the 1890s, this entrepreneur developed a distinctive
style firmly lodged within nineteenth-century aesthetics. However,
Nister's images outshine those of his contemporaries by epitomizing
an exquisite, sentimental beauty. His artistic vision guides all the
works regardless of pop-up mechanics and even of illustrator. In fact,
we are uncertain to what extent Nister contributed his own illustrations
to these books. In many cases, he imposed his own monogram on images
in his imprint, dropping the artist's signature in the course of the
production process.
Nister used a wide range of movable techniques to intrigue
children. The popular late nineteenth-century blind format of Changing
Pictures, for example, capitalizes on a child's fascination with
peek-a-boo. We are surprised to find Jack climbing the beanstalk behind
Little Bo-Peep. Nister also animates his pages with simple slats,
dimensional scenes, and remarkable pinwheel mechanics. With these
basic paper tools, he creates fantastic transformations.

Happy Families and
Their Tales: A Volume of Pictures and Stories of Domestic Pets.
London: Ernest Nister; New York:
E. P. Dutton, [1890].
Gift of Henry S. Gordon.
The families in these images are composed of domestic
animals--cows, kittens, dogs, rabbits, goats--moving like little puppets
in their tranquil scenes.

Changing Pictures:
A Book of Transformation Pictures. London:
Ernest Nister; New York: E. P. Dutton, [1893].
On the opening page, a showman, presenting a drama in
a theatrical setting, ushers us into this "book of transformation
pictures." Nister fulfills this promise of entertainment with the
beautifully crafted action in which one image slides aside to reveal
another.

Pretty Polly. London:
Ernest Nister; New York: E. P. Dutton, [1890s].
Polly, a brilliantly colored parrot, outsmarts the cats
in one of the story lines in this work. She shares the pages with
fairytale coaches, adventures to the seaside, and other fantasy stories
written and illustrated to engage a child's imagination.

Nister's Panorama.
London: Ernest Nister; New York:
E. P. Dutton, [1890s].
In the title of this work, Nister capitalizes on the
nineteenth-century fascination with the theater. Here, he refers to
the panorama, a kind of performance in which an extended painted scroll
revealed one scene after another. The large-scale display, which jumps
off the page, brings us back into the schoolroom, where we find Dr.
Snarl an unequal match for his unruly students.

Weedon, L. L. The
Land of Long Ago: A Visit to Fairyland with Humpty Dumpty. Illus.
E. Stuart Hardy. London: Ernest Nister; New York: E. P. Dutton, [1890].
The "long ago" of this book's title speaks to a "never
never" land of fairytales. The casting of such stories into a remote
historical past cuts them loose from any connection to reality.



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