Oscar Mitchell
Illustrator
oscarlmitchell@gmail.com
📚 - @rcwliteraryagency
-
Soft things at @o.d.d.projects

Party at a castle with dancing and fish and all our mates. Drawing for a lovely wedding at a castle with dancing and fish and mates at the end of last year 🍝

Party at a castle with dancing and fish and all our mates. Drawing for a lovely wedding at a castle with dancing and fish and mates at the end of last year 🍝

Party at a castle with dancing and fish and all our mates. Drawing for a lovely wedding at a castle with dancing and fish and mates at the end of last year 🍝

Party at a castle with dancing and fish and all our mates. Drawing for a lovely wedding at a castle with dancing and fish and mates at the end of last year 🍝

Goose chariot to the moone! The Man in the Moone is a story from the 1620s (!!) written by Bishop Francis Godwin and stakes a strong claim for the first science fiction novel ever written. It’s a pretty bonkers tale that follows protagonist and fictional author, Domingo, who flees the East Indies having killed a man in a duel and is trying to find his way home to Spain. He falls ill en route and is abandoned on St. Helena where he finds a flock of geese that he trains to fly him around the island on a peculiar kite-like contraption. He then tries to fly back to Spain with his geese but - flying too high - encounters tricksy spirit folk who give them wine that “smells like horse piss” before going higher still and landing on the moon. The moon is inhabited with tall, friendly Christians who look after the travellers but Domingo’s geese start to suffer and a couple of them die so it is, again, time to try the journey back to Spain. They land in China where Domingo is arrested and imprisoned. D’oh!
You can find the whole thing to read or listen to online which I would recommend. The early astronomical theories and sciences are quite fun. My goose chariot is somehow less whacky than the original illustrated engravings but I reckon it flies better.
-
It’s also worth looking up the Moon Goose Colony project started by Agnes Meyer-Brandis in 2011; a much more committed response to the tale raising 11 geese from eggs and training them to become disciplined space travellers.

Goose chariot to the moone! The Man in the Moone is a story from the 1620s (!!) written by Bishop Francis Godwin and stakes a strong claim for the first science fiction novel ever written. It’s a pretty bonkers tale that follows protagonist and fictional author, Domingo, who flees the East Indies having killed a man in a duel and is trying to find his way home to Spain. He falls ill en route and is abandoned on St. Helena where he finds a flock of geese that he trains to fly him around the island on a peculiar kite-like contraption. He then tries to fly back to Spain with his geese but - flying too high - encounters tricksy spirit folk who give them wine that “smells like horse piss” before going higher still and landing on the moon. The moon is inhabited with tall, friendly Christians who look after the travellers but Domingo’s geese start to suffer and a couple of them die so it is, again, time to try the journey back to Spain. They land in China where Domingo is arrested and imprisoned. D’oh!
You can find the whole thing to read or listen to online which I would recommend. The early astronomical theories and sciences are quite fun. My goose chariot is somehow less whacky than the original illustrated engravings but I reckon it flies better.
-
It’s also worth looking up the Moon Goose Colony project started by Agnes Meyer-Brandis in 2011; a much more committed response to the tale raising 11 geese from eggs and training them to become disciplined space travellers.

Goose chariot to the moone! The Man in the Moone is a story from the 1620s (!!) written by Bishop Francis Godwin and stakes a strong claim for the first science fiction novel ever written. It’s a pretty bonkers tale that follows protagonist and fictional author, Domingo, who flees the East Indies having killed a man in a duel and is trying to find his way home to Spain. He falls ill en route and is abandoned on St. Helena where he finds a flock of geese that he trains to fly him around the island on a peculiar kite-like contraption. He then tries to fly back to Spain with his geese but - flying too high - encounters tricksy spirit folk who give them wine that “smells like horse piss” before going higher still and landing on the moon. The moon is inhabited with tall, friendly Christians who look after the travellers but Domingo’s geese start to suffer and a couple of them die so it is, again, time to try the journey back to Spain. They land in China where Domingo is arrested and imprisoned. D’oh!
You can find the whole thing to read or listen to online which I would recommend. The early astronomical theories and sciences are quite fun. My goose chariot is somehow less whacky than the original illustrated engravings but I reckon it flies better.
-
It’s also worth looking up the Moon Goose Colony project started by Agnes Meyer-Brandis in 2011; a much more committed response to the tale raising 11 geese from eggs and training them to become disciplined space travellers.

Goose chariot to the moone! The Man in the Moone is a story from the 1620s (!!) written by Bishop Francis Godwin and stakes a strong claim for the first science fiction novel ever written. It’s a pretty bonkers tale that follows protagonist and fictional author, Domingo, who flees the East Indies having killed a man in a duel and is trying to find his way home to Spain. He falls ill en route and is abandoned on St. Helena where he finds a flock of geese that he trains to fly him around the island on a peculiar kite-like contraption. He then tries to fly back to Spain with his geese but - flying too high - encounters tricksy spirit folk who give them wine that “smells like horse piss” before going higher still and landing on the moon. The moon is inhabited with tall, friendly Christians who look after the travellers but Domingo’s geese start to suffer and a couple of them die so it is, again, time to try the journey back to Spain. They land in China where Domingo is arrested and imprisoned. D’oh!
You can find the whole thing to read or listen to online which I would recommend. The early astronomical theories and sciences are quite fun. My goose chariot is somehow less whacky than the original illustrated engravings but I reckon it flies better.
-
It’s also worth looking up the Moon Goose Colony project started by Agnes Meyer-Brandis in 2011; a much more committed response to the tale raising 11 geese from eggs and training them to become disciplined space travellers.

Goose chariot to the moone! The Man in the Moone is a story from the 1620s (!!) written by Bishop Francis Godwin and stakes a strong claim for the first science fiction novel ever written. It’s a pretty bonkers tale that follows protagonist and fictional author, Domingo, who flees the East Indies having killed a man in a duel and is trying to find his way home to Spain. He falls ill en route and is abandoned on St. Helena where he finds a flock of geese that he trains to fly him around the island on a peculiar kite-like contraption. He then tries to fly back to Spain with his geese but - flying too high - encounters tricksy spirit folk who give them wine that “smells like horse piss” before going higher still and landing on the moon. The moon is inhabited with tall, friendly Christians who look after the travellers but Domingo’s geese start to suffer and a couple of them die so it is, again, time to try the journey back to Spain. They land in China where Domingo is arrested and imprisoned. D’oh!
You can find the whole thing to read or listen to online which I would recommend. The early astronomical theories and sciences are quite fun. My goose chariot is somehow less whacky than the original illustrated engravings but I reckon it flies better.
-
It’s also worth looking up the Moon Goose Colony project started by Agnes Meyer-Brandis in 2011; a much more committed response to the tale raising 11 geese from eggs and training them to become disciplined space travellers.

Goose chariot to the moone! The Man in the Moone is a story from the 1620s (!!) written by Bishop Francis Godwin and stakes a strong claim for the first science fiction novel ever written. It’s a pretty bonkers tale that follows protagonist and fictional author, Domingo, who flees the East Indies having killed a man in a duel and is trying to find his way home to Spain. He falls ill en route and is abandoned on St. Helena where he finds a flock of geese that he trains to fly him around the island on a peculiar kite-like contraption. He then tries to fly back to Spain with his geese but - flying too high - encounters tricksy spirit folk who give them wine that “smells like horse piss” before going higher still and landing on the moon. The moon is inhabited with tall, friendly Christians who look after the travellers but Domingo’s geese start to suffer and a couple of them die so it is, again, time to try the journey back to Spain. They land in China where Domingo is arrested and imprisoned. D’oh!
You can find the whole thing to read or listen to online which I would recommend. The early astronomical theories and sciences are quite fun. My goose chariot is somehow less whacky than the original illustrated engravings but I reckon it flies better.
-
It’s also worth looking up the Moon Goose Colony project started by Agnes Meyer-Brandis in 2011; a much more committed response to the tale raising 11 geese from eggs and training them to become disciplined space travellers.

Goose chariot to the moone! The Man in the Moone is a story from the 1620s (!!) written by Bishop Francis Godwin and stakes a strong claim for the first science fiction novel ever written. It’s a pretty bonkers tale that follows protagonist and fictional author, Domingo, who flees the East Indies having killed a man in a duel and is trying to find his way home to Spain. He falls ill en route and is abandoned on St. Helena where he finds a flock of geese that he trains to fly him around the island on a peculiar kite-like contraption. He then tries to fly back to Spain with his geese but - flying too high - encounters tricksy spirit folk who give them wine that “smells like horse piss” before going higher still and landing on the moon. The moon is inhabited with tall, friendly Christians who look after the travellers but Domingo’s geese start to suffer and a couple of them die so it is, again, time to try the journey back to Spain. They land in China where Domingo is arrested and imprisoned. D’oh!
You can find the whole thing to read or listen to online which I would recommend. The early astronomical theories and sciences are quite fun. My goose chariot is somehow less whacky than the original illustrated engravings but I reckon it flies better.
-
It’s also worth looking up the Moon Goose Colony project started by Agnes Meyer-Brandis in 2011; a much more committed response to the tale raising 11 geese from eggs and training them to become disciplined space travellers.

Goose chariot to the moone! The Man in the Moone is a story from the 1620s (!!) written by Bishop Francis Godwin and stakes a strong claim for the first science fiction novel ever written. It’s a pretty bonkers tale that follows protagonist and fictional author, Domingo, who flees the East Indies having killed a man in a duel and is trying to find his way home to Spain. He falls ill en route and is abandoned on St. Helena where he finds a flock of geese that he trains to fly him around the island on a peculiar kite-like contraption. He then tries to fly back to Spain with his geese but - flying too high - encounters tricksy spirit folk who give them wine that “smells like horse piss” before going higher still and landing on the moon. The moon is inhabited with tall, friendly Christians who look after the travellers but Domingo’s geese start to suffer and a couple of them die so it is, again, time to try the journey back to Spain. They land in China where Domingo is arrested and imprisoned. D’oh!
You can find the whole thing to read or listen to online which I would recommend. The early astronomical theories and sciences are quite fun. My goose chariot is somehow less whacky than the original illustrated engravings but I reckon it flies better.
-
It’s also worth looking up the Moon Goose Colony project started by Agnes Meyer-Brandis in 2011; a much more committed response to the tale raising 11 geese from eggs and training them to become disciplined space travellers.

A great, big bundle of decorations coming to @gatheredhandslondon this weekend.
We’re bringing lots of these, some brand new cushions and other sale price older bits/ samples to @markandmarko at 71-75 Powerscroft Croft, London, E5 0PT.
🎄

A great, big bundle of decorations coming to @gatheredhandslondon this weekend.
We’re bringing lots of these, some brand new cushions and other sale price older bits/ samples to @markandmarko at 71-75 Powerscroft Croft, London, E5 0PT.
🎄

A great, big bundle of decorations coming to @gatheredhandslondon this weekend.
We’re bringing lots of these, some brand new cushions and other sale price older bits/ samples to @markandmarko at 71-75 Powerscroft Croft, London, E5 0PT.
🎄

A great, big bundle of decorations coming to @gatheredhandslondon this weekend.
We’re bringing lots of these, some brand new cushions and other sale price older bits/ samples to @markandmarko at 71-75 Powerscroft Croft, London, E5 0PT.
🎄

A gang of scary monster patch cushions we finished this week.
All available and will be uploaded to the shop over the next couple of days but give us a message if you want dibs 👀

A gang of scary monster patch cushions we finished this week.
All available and will be uploaded to the shop over the next couple of days but give us a message if you want dibs 👀

A gang of scary monster patch cushions we finished this week.
All available and will be uploaded to the shop over the next couple of days but give us a message if you want dibs 👀

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

A bunch of scanned sketchbook pages from various trips and museum visits over the past few years 😋

Me and @dellydeacon put all our bits online a while ago and didn’t tell anyone 🤫 you can have a look at all the cushions and toys at oddprojects.co.uk (link in bio) and even buy one if you like.
We’ll update it when we make new things which is every now and again, but we won’t tell you about it.

Me and @dellydeacon put all our bits online a while ago and didn’t tell anyone 🤫 you can have a look at all the cushions and toys at oddprojects.co.uk (link in bio) and even buy one if you like.
We’ll update it when we make new things which is every now and again, but we won’t tell you about it.

Me and @dellydeacon put all our bits online a while ago and didn’t tell anyone 🤫 you can have a look at all the cushions and toys at oddprojects.co.uk (link in bio) and even buy one if you like.
We’ll update it when we make new things which is every now and again, but we won’t tell you about it.

Me and @dellydeacon put all our bits online a while ago and didn’t tell anyone 🤫 you can have a look at all the cushions and toys at oddprojects.co.uk (link in bio) and even buy one if you like.
We’ll update it when we make new things which is every now and again, but we won’t tell you about it.

Me and @dellydeacon put all our bits online a while ago and didn’t tell anyone 🤫 you can have a look at all the cushions and toys at oddprojects.co.uk (link in bio) and even buy one if you like.
We’ll update it when we make new things which is every now and again, but we won’t tell you about it.

Me and @dellydeacon put all our bits online a while ago and didn’t tell anyone 🤫 you can have a look at all the cushions and toys at oddprojects.co.uk (link in bio) and even buy one if you like.
We’ll update it when we make new things which is every now and again, but we won’t tell you about it.

A coupla kissin cushions by @olmitchell and @dellydeacon 💕💋🥰 Pics by Mr @george.baggaley 💥

A coupla kissin cushions by @olmitchell and @dellydeacon 💕💋🥰 Pics by Mr @george.baggaley 💥

A coupla kissin cushions by @olmitchell and @dellydeacon 💕💋🥰 Pics by Mr @george.baggaley 💥

A coupla kissin cushions by @olmitchell and @dellydeacon 💕💋🥰 Pics by Mr @george.baggaley 💥

A coupla kissin cushions by @olmitchell and @dellydeacon 💕💋🥰 Pics by Mr @george.baggaley 💥
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