This section contains 903 words (approx. 3 pages at 400 words per page) |
Kravec discusses the relationship between Wilde's play and the satiric illustrations that were created by Aubrey Beardsley for the published edition of Salome.
Ever since Oscar Wilde first saw them, Aubrey Beardsley's illustrations for Salome have caused controversy. Wilde worried that the drawings, which he believed did not capture the spirit of the play, would reduce the text to the role of "illustrating Aubrey's illustrations." Beardsley's audacious visual objectifications of depravity, looking even more "decadent" than his typical caricatures, may not match the deliberately crafted metaphors of remote, cold beauty that sustain Wilde's tragedy, yet the drawings transcend time and circumstance in much the same way that the dialogue does. Illustrator and author shared a similar sort of satirical vision. Beardsley, eager to translate or illustrate the play, commented that he "thoroughly understood" its spirit, and indeed, his drawings can augment our understanding of the play. The...
This section contains 903 words (approx. 3 pages at 400 words per page) |