Staff Pick of the Week, Part Two!
Here we continue our look at the 1938 two-volume edition of Oscar Wilde’s one-act play, Salome, published by the Limited Editions Club in an edition of 1,500. Catch up on Part One here.
The English-language volume was printed at The Fanfare Press in London under the direction of Ernest Ingram. Illustrations for the English volume are by Aubrey Beardsley, reproduced from the First English Edition (London: Elkin Mathews and John Lane, 1894). Aubrey had produced sixteen drawings to accompany Wilde’s play, but John Lane had omitted four of them from the original publication and had expurgated two more. It was learning about these additional Beardsley illustrations, as well as Wilde’s lukewarm feelings for the English translation, that sparked the idea to produce two volumes for the work. The Limited Editions Club was able to obtain clear reproductions of Beardsley’s original drawings and included all sixteen (unedited!) in their edition.
On this day, 10 November 1984, 1,000 people protested in Rugby, England, against the local council removing LGBT+ people from their equal opportunities policy. To critics it seemed clear that the council intended to actively discriminate against LGBT+ people, with the leader of the council stating “We’re not having men turn up for work in dresses and earrings”. Other councillors denigrated “all queers and perverts” and declared “all homosexuals to be vile and perverted people”. The Sun, owned by media mogul Rupert Murdoch, supported the “brave” Conservative local authority in its war against the “sick nonsense” of LGBT+ rights, and called on its readers to “ALL follow Rugby in fighting back!”. Sandwell council then followed suit, trying to ban lesbians and gay men from caring roles. While local public opinion was divided, with around 46% of people agreeing with the council as opposed to 54% disagreeing, months of protest were organised by council workers, LGBT+ rights groups and others. On 10 November police arrested 18 people for unfurling banners in the town centre, and in January tomatoes and smoke flares were thrown at councillors in the town hall. By mid-February the council had been forced to backtrack and amend its policy to state that they would not discriminate against employees on the basis of sexual orientation.
Learn more about homophobia in Britain at this time in our podcast episodes 27-29: https://workingclasshistory.com/2019/06/10/e23-25-lesbians-gays-support-the-miners/
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Willem de Kooning’s Collage (1950) is estimated at $18 million to $25 million
Alberto Giacometti’s Trois hommes qui marchent (grand plateau) (1948) is estimated at $15 million to $20 million
Pablo Picasso, Femme dans un fauteuil (1927) is estimated at $15 million to $20 million
…Georges Seurat’s Les Poseuses, Ensemble (Petite version) (1888), has been described as the most important work by the artist in private hands. (That is all the more notable considering Seurat only made 47 paintings in the first place.) It will undoubtedly smash the artist’s current $35 million auction record, set way back in 1999 for an 1884 oil from the collection John Hay Whitney at Sotheby’s. …
… Buckle up for what is sure to be another wild market ride for Andy Warhol, whose White Disaster [White Car Crash 19 Times] (1963), has an estimate of $80 million. The massive canvas, once owned by Swiss dealer Thomas Ammann, marks the first time in nearly 10 years that one of Warhol’s “Death and Disaster” paintings has come to market….
… Expect bidders to duke it out over this Jean-Michel Basquiat portrait of prize fighter Sugar Ray Robinson. The asking price is in excess of $35 million, a territory that does not seem hard to reach considering that ten other Basquiat works at auction to date have exceeded it….
Orpheus is a famous figure from Greek mythology, well known both for his talents with the lyre and kithara, and the tragic tale of his wife, the wood nymph Eurydice. His musical talents could charm wild animals, it could stop streams and trees would move closer to hear his beautiful singing.
Unlike most figures from myth who are very solidly mythological, the ancient Greeks were quite divided over the figure of Orpheus, whether he existed or not, mainly due to Aristotle’s claim. He is, though, central to the religious movement of Orphism, a mystery cult informed by the god Dionysus and said to be founded by Orpheus.
Ovid begins his tale of the marriage of Orpheus and Eurydice (sometimes referred to as Agriope) - both very much in love - with Orpheus calling for the god of marriage, Hymenaeus, to bless his wedding; this proved of no use, however, for the wedding was ill-omened. After they were married, Eurydice took a stroll with her naiad attendants, and she was bitten on the ankle by a poisonous snake and died. Orpheus was distraught, unable to live without her, and was determined to bring her back from the underworld.
LEARN MORE –> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0Na5QH8BOo
bebx:
Twitter becoming a funnier, more chaotic site than Tumblr was not on my 2022 bingo card but here we are.
It’s a hellscape over there












