€1,500 - €2,000
James Edward Kelly (1855-1933)
"Oscar Wilde," lithograph on Japanese paper, dated 1882 (Jan.) approx. 23cms x 19cms, mounted and framed. (1)
Note: The artist chosen was James Edward Kelly (1855—1933), a New Yorker of Irish descent, who grew up during the Civil War. It was this upbringing, perhaps, that caused Kelly to develop a lifelong interest in American history—indeed the subjects of his sculpture and illustrations are often people and events of American military history. The connection with Wilde continued when, as the Complete Works [1] reminds us, "Kelly was commissioned to provide five full-page designs and nine tailpieces for Rennel Rodd's 'Rose Leaf and Apple Leaf' (1882), to which Wilde contributed an introduction".
The drawing depicts Wilde, later famous for his children's stories, seated in profile perhaps as storyteller, alongside an unidentified child. It is often speculated that the boy was Kelly's son, but Matthew Sturgis in his biography Oscar Wilde (UK Edition: p. 778, n. 44) points out that Kelly had no son.
Kelly used the head of Wilde from this image as the basis for an etching made to reproduce advertising media during 1882; and he also sculpted a similar clay bas-relief from which a bronze plaque was made. The image has since appeared in various guises, including in Wilde biographies
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25% inc VAT*
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