Aubrey Beardsley (1872-1898) 
Aubrey Vincent Beardsley (August 21, 1872 – March
16, 1898) was an influential English illustrator,
and author. He was born in Brighton. A Decadent and
Symbolist artist, attacked Victorian sexual values.
In its broadest sense, decadence refers to the fall
of a society from a position of strength and prosperity
to a state of weakness and ruin. More narrowly, members
of the nineteenth-century Decadent movement in art
and literature either describe aspects of decadent
life and society or reflect the decadent literary
aesthetic.
Beardsley was aligned with the
Yellow Book coterie of artists and writers. He was
art editor for the first four editions and produced
many illustrations for the magazine. He was also
closely aligned with Aestheticism, the British counterpart
of Decadence and Symbolism. Most of his images are
done in ink, and feature large dark areas contrasted
with large blank ones, and areas of fine detail contrasted
with areas with none at all. Aubrey Beardsley was
the most controversial artist of the Art Nouveau
era, renowned for his dark and perverse images and
the grotesque erotica, which themes he explored in
his later work. His most famous erotic illustrations
were on themes of history and mythology, including
his illustrations for Lysistrata and Salomé.
Beardsley was a close friend of Oscar Wilde and
illustrated his play Salomé in 1893 for its French performance;
it was performed in English the following year. He
also produced extensive illustrations for books and
magazines (e.g. for a deluxe edition of Sir Thomas
Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur) and worked for magazines
like The Savoy and The Studio. Beardsley also wrote
Under the Hill, an unfinished erotic tale based loosely
on the legend of Tannhäuser. Beardsley was also
a caricaturist and did some political cartoons, mirroring
Wilde's irreverent wit in art. Beardsley's work reflected
the decadence of his era and his influence was enormous,
clearly visible in the work of the French Symbolists,
the Poster art Movement of the 1890s and the work
of many later-period Art Nouveau artists like Pape,
Mucha and Clarke.
Beardsley was a public character
as well as a private eccentric. He said, "I
have one aim — the grotesque. If I am not grotesque
I am nothing." Wilde said he had "a face
like a silver hatchet, and grass green hair."
Although
Beardsley was aligned with the homosexual clique
that included Oscar Wilde and other English aesthetes,
the details of his sexuality remain in question.
Speculation about his sexuality include rumours of
an incestuous relationship with his elder sister,
Mabel, who may have borne his miscarried child.
Beardsley
died in Menton, France at the age of 25 on March
16, 1898. It is generally accepted that Beardsley
died of tuberculosis, although suicide is also rumored.

SALOMÉ by Oscar Wilde



Isolde