- Aubrey Beardsley
Sheet: 11 1/16 × 8 1/16 in. (28.1 × 20.5 cm)
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At the time Frederick Evans and Aubrey Beardsley met, in 1889, Evans was a London bookseller and a sometime photographer, and Beardsley was a frustrated insurance clerk and a would-be artist who haunted the bookshop though too poor to buy anything. Evans recognized freshness and beauty in the seventeen-year-old’s sinuous drawings, traded books for them, and made and sold platinum-print copies of them. Most important, he recommended Beardsley to the publisher of a new edition of Alfred Lord Tennyson’s Morte d’Arthur, a commission that would prove to be the young artist’s breakthrough moment and enable him to become a full-time illustrator and artist.
Beardsley, whose gaunt face was described by Evans as like that of a gargoyle and by Oscar Wilde as “a silver hatchet,” proved to be a challenging portrait subject. Ultimately, Evans embraced, rather than masked, the artist’s beaklike profile and rapt attention, conveying something of the intense and dandyish image that Beardsley cultivated. After a brief career that included scandalously irreverent illustrations for Wilde’s Salome and The Yellow Book, Beardsley died of tuberculosis at the age of twenty-five.
ProvenanceMike and Mickey Marvins, Houston; given to MFAH, 2023.
Exhibition History“A Photographer’s Collection: Gifts from Michael and Michele Marvins,” The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, April 4–July 5, 2015.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
recto printed on sheet below facsimile signature: Swan Electric Engraving Co.
printed lower right below image facsimile signature: Aubrey Beardsley
printed lower right below the image: F.H.Evans.
Cataloguing data may change with further research.
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