Aubrey Beardsley - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
XVIII. aeneas and company set out from Troy.
XIX. aeneas seeth Creusa's ghost.
The above drawings in ordinary ink are contained in a copy-book, 8 6-1/2 inches. Unpublished. Exhibited in London at Carfax & Co.'s Galleries, October 1904. (Property of Harold Hartley, Esq.) End of 1886.
5. THE POPE WEIGHS HEAVILY ON THE CHURCH. Pen-drawing contained in the same copy-book with the last-named.
6. JOHN SMILES, a comic ill.u.s.tration to the school history book, representing King John in the act of signing Magna Charta.
Pen-drawing on paper 7-1/4 5 inches. Unpublished. (Property of H. A. Payne, Esq.)
7. SAINT BRADLAUGH, M.P., a caricature. Pen-drawing on a half sheet of notepaper. Unpublished. (Property of H. A. Payne, Esq.)
8. AUTUMN TINTS. Caricature in black and white of the artist's schoolmaster, Mr Marshall, expounding to his pupils the beauties of nature. Unpublished. Given to Ernest Lambert, Esq., Brighton, _c._ 1886-7.
Beside the above-named there must have been numbers of such drawings belonging to this early period; for in his schooldays Aubrey Beardsley was, to quote the words of Mr H. A. Payne, "constantly doing these little, rough, humorous sketches, which he gave away wholesale." Many have been destroyed or lost, others dispersed abroad. Thus, for instance, one old Brighton Grammar School boy, C. E. Pitt-Schenkel, told Mr Payne that he was in possession of some, which he took out to South Africa.
9. THE JUBILEE CRICKET a.n.a.lYSIS. Eleven tiny pen-and-ink sketches, ent.i.tled respectively:----
I. A good bowler.
II. Over.
III. Slip.
IV. Square leg.
V. Shooters.
VI. Caught.
VII. A block.
VIII. A demon bowler.
IX. Stumped.
X. Long leg.
XI. Cutting a ball.
All these subjects being represented, in humorous fas.h.i.+on, by literal equivalents. These drawings, though they cannot pretend to any merit, are notable as the earliest specimens to be published of the artist's work. Together they formed a whole-page photo-lithographic ill.u.s.tration in _Past and Present_, the Brighton Grammar School Magazine, June 1887.
10. CONGREVE'S "DOUBLE DEALER," ill.u.s.tration of a scene from, comprising Maskwell and Lady Touchwood. Pen drawing with sepia wash, on a sheet of paper 13-1/2 11 inches. Unpublished. (Property of H. A. Payne, Esq.) Signed and dated June 30, 1888.
11. HOLYWELL STREET. Wash drawing. First published in _The Poster_, Aug.-Sept. 1898. Republished in "The Early Work of Aubrey Beardsley, with a Prefatory Note by H. C. Marillier." John Lane, March 1899.
(Property of Charles B. Cochran, Esq., 1888.)
12. THE PAY OF THE PIED PIPER: A LEGEND OF HAMELIN TOWN. Eleven line drawings in ill.u.s.tration of, as follows:----
I. Entrance of Councillors, headed by Beadle carrying a mace.
Reproduced in _The Westminster Budget_, March 25, 1898.
II. Rats feeding upon a cheese in a dish. Reproduced in _Westminster Budget_, March 25, 1898.
III. Child climbing into an armchair to escape from the rats. Reproduced in _The Poster_, Aug.-Sept. 1898.
IV. The Sitting of the Council, under the presidency of the Burgomaster.
V. Deputation of Ladies.
VI. Two rats on their hind legs, carrying off the Beadle's mace: behind them are three rats running. Reproduced in _Westminster Budget_, March 25, 1898.
VII. Meeting between the Beadle and the Piper.
VIII. The rats follow the Piper out of the town. Republished in _Westminster Budget_, March 25, 1898, and in _The Poster_, Aug.-Sept. 1898.
IX. Citizens rejoice at the departure of the rats.
X. The Piper is dismissed by the Beadle. Republished in _Westminster Budget_, March 25, 1898, and also in _Magazine of Art_, May 1898.
XI. The Piper entices away the children.
The above ill.u.s.trations vary in size from 3-1/4 2-1/2 to 6-1/2 4-1/2 inches. They are unsigned, but a prefatory note describes them as being "the perfectly original designs and drawings of a boy now in the school, A. V. Beardsley"; and adds: "Our regret is that, lacking experience in the preparation of drawings for the photo-engraver, the reproductions should fall so far short of the original sketches." Published in the programme and book of words of the Brighton Grammar School Annual Entertainment at the Dome, on Wednesday, Dec, 19, 1888; bound up afterwards with _Past and Present_, February 1889. Latter part of 1888.
13. A Sc.r.a.p-BOOK, size 9-1/2 7 inches, the fly-leaf inscribed, in his own writing, _A. Beardsley_, 6/5/90, presented by the artist's mother to Robert Ross, Esq. Contains the following drawings, mounted as sc.r.a.ps:----
I. Manon Lescaut, three drawings to ill.u.s.trate different scenes from. Executed with very fine pen and ink, the latter having, as compared with maturer works, a brownish tinge. One of them first appeared in "A Second Book of Fifty Drawings by Aubrey Beardsley"
(Leonard Smithers, December 1898), and all three were included in "The Later Work of Aubrey Beardsley" (John Lane, 1901).
II. La Dame aux Camelias. 4-3/8 inches square, pen and brownish ink with wash. First published in "Second Book," and afterwards in "Later Work." This is a totally different design from that which afterwards appeared, with the same t.i.tle, in "The Yellow Book."
See below.
III. Tartarin, two ill.u.s.trations of, in pencil and colours, size 4-1/8 2-3/4 and 4-1/2 3-1/2 inches respectively.
IV. La Lecon (Madame Bovary). 5-1/4 6-3/4. Chinese white and dark sepia wash. First published in "Second Book," and again in "Later Work."
V. L'Abbe Birotteau (Cure de Tours). 3 2 inches. Pen-and-ink with wash, on pale greenish paper.
VI. L'Abbe Troubert (Cure de Tours). 5 2-3/4 inches. Dark sepia wash.
VII. Madame Bovary. 5-5/8 3-1/8 inches. Pencil. First published in "Second Book," and again in "Later Work."
VIII. Sapho (Daudet). Wanting. Over its place has been gummed another drawing, also wanting, its t.i.tle written at the foot, _L'homme qui rit_.
IX. Le Cousin Pons. 5-1/8 2-3/8 inches. Indian ink.
X. Portrait of Alphonse Daudet. 2-3/4 2-3/16 inches. Indian ink on pale blue paper.
XI. Watteau, Ma Cousine (Cousin Pons). 5-1/2 2-3/4 inches. Pen-and-ink with wash on pale grey toned paper.
XII. Mademoiselle Gamard (Cure de Tours). 3-1/8 2-1/8 inches. Indian ink wash.
XIII. Madame Cibot (Cousin Pons). 4 2-7/8 inches. Indian ink wash.
XIV. (Jack) Attendons! 3-5/8 inches high, irregular silhouette.
Dark sepia wash.
XV. Jeanne D'Arc, the childhood of. 9 3-3/8 inches. Sepia and madder wash on toned paper. First published in "Second Book," again in "Later Work."
XVI. Frontispiece to Balzac's "Contes Drolatiques." 6-3/4 4-1/8 inches.
Drawn after the manner of Richard Doyle. First published in "Second Book," again in "Later Work."