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Showing 1 - 25 of
95 matches in All Departments
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Salome; a Play (Hardcover)
Oscar Wilde, Alfred Bruce Douglas, Aubrey Beardsley
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R753
Discovery Miles 7 530
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Volpone
Robert Baldwin Ross, Aubrey Beardsley, Vincent O'Sullivan
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R844
Discovery Miles 8 440
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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An essential collection of chivalric romance, swordplay, wizardry
and brutal feats of courage, Malory's 15th century Morte d'Arthur
is one of the world's greatest pieces of myth-making, with most
gothic and modern fantasy finding its roots in this splendid mix of
history, magic and literature. This selected edition features all
the best stories and many of Aubrey Beardsley's classic
illustrations.
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Keynotes (Hardcover)
Aubrey Beardsley George Egerton
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R812
Discovery Miles 8 120
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Salome (Paperback)
Oscar Wilde; Illustrated by Aubrey Beardsley
bundle available
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R211
Discovery Miles 2 110
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Salome, the haunting one-act tragedy that marks Wilde's first great
success in the theatre, retells the Biblical story in which the
stepdaughter of the tetrarch Herod Antipas demands the head of John
the Baptist on a silver platter as a reward for her dancing for her
stepfather's amusement. Written in 1891, and prepared for its first
run in 1892, rehearsals of Salome had to be cancelled when the play
was banned by the Lord Chamberlain due to its depiction of
religious characters. Undaunted, Wilde moved on to the drawing-room
and society comedies he is today best known for, wowing London
audiences with Lady Windermere's Fan and A Woman of No Importance,
and it was only in 1894 that Salome saw the light of day in an
English translation, with a series of specially commissioned
illustrations by the up-and-coming Aubrey Beardsley.
'To critics who said that the full-lipped so-called 'Beardsley
mouth', which adorned many of his women, was 'inexpressive and
ugly', the artist countered, 'Well, let them criticise. It's my
mouth and not theirs. I like big mouths. People like the little
mouth - the "Dolly Varden" mouth, if that describes it better. A
big mouth is the sign of character and strength. Look at Ellen
Terry with her great, strong mouth. In fact, I haven't any patience
with small-mouthed people.' 'The popular idea of a picture is
something told in oil or writ in water to be hung on a room's wall
or in a picture gallery to perplex an artless public.' 'To my mind,
there is nothing so depressing as a Gothic cathedral. I hate to
have the sun shut out by the saints.' 'What a nice ample creature
George Sand is: like a wonderful old cow with all her calves.' And
other witty, urbane insights on life, art, and culture, illustrated
with selected drawings from his Grotesques series.
Retold out of the old romances, this collection of Arthurian tales endeavors to make each adventure--"The Quest for the Round Table, " "The First Quest of Sir Lancelot, " "How the Holy Grail Came to Camelot, " and so forth--part of a fixed pattern that effectively presents the whole story, as it does in Le Morte D'Arthur, but in a way less intimidating to young readers. (All Ages)
Lord Alfred Douglas' translation of Wilde's great play (originally written in French), with all well-known Beardsley illustrations, including suppressed plates. The best edition. 28 Beardsley illustrations; introduction by Robert Ross.
Delve deeper into the work of the intriguing and iconic artist
Aubrey Beardsley with this beautiful reissue of his classic 1897
illustrated book, containing fifty of his best known works. Aubrey
Beardsley (1872–1898) lived a desperately short life and his
career spanned just seven years. Nonetheless, his output as a
draughtsman and illustrator was prolific. Beardsley's subversive
illustrations became synonymous with decadence: he delighted in the
erotic, shocking audiences with his bizarre sense of humour and
fascination with the grotesque. His work was deemed too scandalous
by many publishers of the period, but found a suitably unseemly
home with the notorious Leonard Charles Smithers. This book,
published by Smithers in 1897, and now reproduced in a
near-facsimile edition, is as much a historic document as it is a
beautiful introduction to Beardsley's art.
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