Dec 15, 2010 - Sale 2234

Sale 2234 - Lot 87

Unsold
Estimate: $ 4,000 - $ 6,000
AUBREY BEARDSLEY (1872-1898) [THE PSEUDONYM / AUTONYM LIBRARIES.] Version before text. 1894.
23x15 1/2 inches, 58 1/2x39 cm
Condition B+: repaired tears and creases in margins and image; restoration in margins and corners.
Aubrey Beardsley, beloved and reviled in Britain as the most visible rebel against staid Victorian mores, began work as art editor for the Yellow Book in 1894. His decorative Art Nouveau style, considered grotesque and vulgar by many, was greatly imitated in America, and added life, spice, excitement and novelty to American poster sidings. Writing in The Poster in November 1900, Scotson-Clark pointed out that, "Until the introduction of the Beardsley work, all posters seen were . . . stippled until all life had been taken out of them." For this, like his posters for the Yellow Book, Beardsley designed the images and the text frame was left blank to be filled in by the publisher of the books being advertised. As a result this poster exists with several different text variations. While the bookstore at the top of the image is treated in a rather classic manner, the charismatic, elongated woman seen in profile is representative of his minimal graphic treatment and use of flat colors. DFP I 4, Gallo 54, Affiches Anglaise (var) np, Muller Brockmann 34.