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13 de jan. de 2024

Pop-up “Alice Through the Looking Glass” Illustrated by Maxim Mitrofanov: Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious


 

Pop-up “Alice Through the Looking Glass” 

Illustrated by Maxim Mitrofanov

3-D structures by Oksana Ivanova

 Published by AST in 2023

 


 

I am here enchanted by this rare jewel that is the pop-up edition of Alice through the Looking Glass illustrated by the Russian Maxim Mitrofanov with 3-D structures by Oksana Ivanova. Suddenly memories of readings and arcane experiences knocked on my door. When I was 5 years old I got a magical carousel edition of ‘Hansel and Gretel’ by the Brothers Grimm that I never found again, and from that inspiration I created sock puppets and built a small house made of sweets and cookies and would write and perform a post-modern play reinterpreting  the subject at school when I was just 12 years old. Along the way, I intensely experienced this mental effervescent idea that books, their inner lands and inhabitants hold mysteries and surprises and could reach our world.

The Italian writer Giorgio Manganelli once said in his brilliant
parallel reading” of the adventures of Pinocchio: “A book cannot be read; we dive into it. He is, at all times, around us.” And if opening the cover of a book is really like opening the first door that never closes again, I revisit in Alice through the Looking Glass, a story so well known that I have delved into, illustrated and crossed so many times, and meet again with its characters who rise from the horizontality of the page and live with me the desire for them to take on a life of their own and invite me to also go through the liminary space.

Eliza, the heroine of the story “The Wild Swans” by Hans Christian
Andersen, had a magical picture book, in which everything was alive. The birds sang, and people came out of the book and spoke to the girl and her brothers; but when the pages were turned, they returned to their places, so that everything was in order. With the memory of this tale, philosopher Walter Benjamin discusses whether it is the characters who jump out of the book or whether it is the (his choice) children who immerse themselves in reading their illustrated books.

Faced with this magic box, I would answer that both
can happen in imaginary realms. In one hand the characters jump off the pages, as if they wanted to create a life of their own, reminding me  the classics of Brazilian children's literature by Monteiro Lobato in XXth century, in which the characters from fairy tales stories and classics like Alice escape books to live new adventures in Yellow Woodpecker Ranch, a magical fictional land in Brazil. I have the hypothesis that one of Lobato's inspirations for the characters' escape may have been the vision of an Alice in Wonderland book with a pop-up page illustrated by the English woman Ada Bowley, whose illustrations are in the first Brazillian Alices, first adapted and published by Lobato in 1931. It was written in the cover: “Come to life panorama”.


CARROLL, Lewis. Father Tuck's Alice In Wonderland “Come to life” panorama. Ilustrações de A. L. Bowley. London - Paris - New York. Raphael Tuck & Sons. c. 1930.

In this case in my hands, opening the book is not just going through a door but also, literally, going through the looking glass in its brilliant cover full of enchantment and clever engine, and entering the full book as a Sheep Shop cabinet of curiosities, which I consider probably the most intriguing space in this entire adventure, with shelves full of challenges and interactive enigmas unveiled, but which become empty when we look at them. Here the look plays hide-and-seek, the hand plays once upon a new, the imagination crosses unexpected portals. At the same time, we also become Alices, interacting with the pieces of the game, talking to them and bringing to life the challenges that Carroll's text presents to us and Mitrofanov and Ivanova invite us to play again as an alicedelic literary toy.

 


 
Mitrofanov has already illustrated AIW in pop-up format in one also brilliant accomplishment but with fewer paper architecture. Also reimagined multiple plane editions of Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass with different drawings. I’m intrigued that I find out something obvious that I didn’t notice before clearly or just hadn’t put into words. Illustrations of Mitrofanov are very dynamic and alive, we can fell the rabbit running through the book, the pool of tears overflowing the pages, we are placed in angles that challenge our balance in Alice’s subtle terrifying transformations or falling through the earth, and so on. The illustrator has a brilliant imagination fulfilled with fairy tales and fantasy previous illustrated books, and witnessing his Instagram make me come back to the shelves in Sheep Shop, Eliza’s and Lobato’s books, or The Magic Bookcase of Robert Ingpen, and imagine the characters coming and crossing the little squares to begin new stories. 

 

But to find alicedelic curious details and unsuspected references in his Alices is a perfect work for the nexialist comments of @semperluxus, who has a magical cabinet of wonders for lovers of special editions of Alice and fantasy and her never ending multidimensional story. According to Semperlux, Mitrofavov’s Wonderland… “It's one of loveliest Alice books on the market, & is very richly illustrated - there are colour illustrations on all 140 pages, with a myriad of marvelous details in every picture”.

 




Images from: Ruslania  bookshop

 

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