Charles Ricketts & Charles Shannon
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
763. A Seated Figure by an Archway
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
762. A Fictional Cover for A Comedy of Masks (1893)
Late 1892, in an undated letter, the poet and prose writer Ernest Dowson (1867-1900) wrote to his former fellow student at Oxford, Charles Sayle (1864-1924), that the novel Dowson had written with another fellow student, Arthur Moore (1866-1952), had been accepted by publisher William Heinemann in London. The novel, started in 1890, would be published in three volumes in the autumn of 1893.
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| Ernest Dowson and Arthur Moore, A Comedy of Masks London: William Heinemann, 1893 [Photo: Maggs Bros., London] |
Dowson wrote to Sayle, who had by then begun a career as a librarian and bibliographer:
Heinemann has accepted our novel, but is vague about dates, which is tedious of him.
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| Ernest Dowson and Arthur Moore, A Comedy of Masks London: William Heinemann, 1894 [first one-volume edition] [Photo: Maggs Bros., London] |
The bindings of the first edition are stamped with an ornament combining a burning torch with a pair of masks, one for comedy and one for tragedy, the classic symbols of Thalia and Melpomene, representing the performing arts. The later, single-volume edition does not show a drama mask, but three comedy masks on a shield, the middle one representing an antique Greek mask.
But the book cover could have looked very different.Wednesday, March 4, 2026
761. Had Zimri Peace Who Slew His Master?
Harry Quilter (1851-1907), whose work was ridiculed by both James McNeill Whistler and Oscar Wilde, gave Shannon and Ricketts the opportunity to create drawings for his magazine The Universal Review. He would reproduce two of these drawings, both by Charles Shannon, in his art historical work Preferences in Art, Life and Literature (1892).
Preferences contained 67 illustrations. However, a deluxe large-paper edition also appeared. These numbered copies contain 114 illustrations, 56 of which were printed in autotype, mounted on additional sheets with the titles and names of the artists handwritten in ink. Among those additional illustrations are a drawing by Shannon and one by Ricketts, the latter titled 'Had Zimri Peace Who Slew His Master?'
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| Charles Ricketts, 'Had Zimri Peace Who Slew His Master?' (The Universal Review, 15 August 1889) [Photo: Jos Uljee] |
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| Charles Ricketts, 'Had Zimri Peace Who Slew His Master?' (published as 'Jezebel' in Preferences in Art, Life and Literature (1892), facing page 232) |
He wrote in a letter that accompanied a copy of the book he sent as a Christmas present to Thomas Sturge Moore (13 December 1926):
We are far from Christmas yet, but I am sending your Christmas present with this as the post-office won't have it, and it too will probably take time on the railway – though I shall send it by passenger train.It comes with a great deal of love from Emily and me to you and Marie. Of course my commercial soul is distressed by the foreknowledge that you will want to cut it up and take out the only things that are of value, for its price is going up steadily! But here it is for you to do as you like with; and we are happy in sending it, for we know you will rejoice in the superb reproduction of Ricketts’ “Jezebel” and the other treasures as much as we do.
It was really a great happiness when we found this copy some months ago, and we at once said we must have it for you.
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
760. A Rare Prospectus for A House of Pomegranates
Jeremy Mason's Oscar Wilde collection, sold at Bonhams on 18 February, fetched both expected and unexpected high prices. Letters from Wilde, books from his own library and inscribed copies have been fetching record prices since his centenary in 2000, but other items, such as a photograph of Wilde on his deathbed, also fetched prices that exceeded expectations. At least, those of some of the underbidders.
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| Oscar Wilde, A House of Pomegranates (1891) cover design by Charles Ricketts Jeremy Mason's copy (photo: Bomhams) |
One of the books that is not rare in itself is his 1891 collection of short stories, A House of Pomegranates, illustrated by Charles Ricketts and Charles Shannon. Copies of this book can be purchased at reasonable prices, ranging from £600 to £3,500. The Mason copy ultimately fetched £8,960.00 (including premium).
That is a considerable amount, especially since it is not a pristine copy, described as 'light spotting to a few pages, publisher's pictorial cloth gilt, lower cover unevenly stained and faded'.
However, hidden in plain sight, a special feature was mentioned: '4pp. pictorial prospectus loosely inserted'. This captured the imagination, because although 250 copies of the prospectus were printed, it is now extremely rare.
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
759. Apollo and Marsyas
In a musical contest between Apollo and Marsyas, it was the latter who lost and was subsequently flayed alive by Apollo. Such mythological stories have often been depicted by artists, and this story is usually, but not always, illustrated with the scene in which Marsyas is tortured, as in a drawing by Luca Giordano.
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| Luca Giordano (attributed to) 'Apollo slaying Marsyas' National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne Felton Bequest, 1923 |
For their illustrations, Ricketts and Shannon choose another moment, Apollo and Marsyas playing their instruments. Shannon made two different drawings that were pasted into an album (now at the British Museum). They look like magazine illustrations, possibly head- or tailpieces, and must have been done early in his career.
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| Charles Shannon, 'Apollo, Marsyas' (undated drawing) [British Museum: 1946,0209.50] [© The Trustees of the British Museum. Shared under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) licence] |
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| Charles Shannon, 'Apollo, Marsyas' (undated drawing) [British Museum: 1946,0209.51] [© The Trustees of the British Museum. Shared under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) licence] |
Ricketts, like Shannon, depicted the musicians (not the winner and loser). The image came up for auction in the John Russell Taylor sale at Olympia Auctions on 11 February.
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| Charles Ricketts, 'Apollo and Marsyas' (undated) |
The dedication is consistent with the subject of the image, music. The name 'Mascabesi' is wrong, the musical friend who was given this sheet was Blanche Marchesi (1863-1940), a mezzo-soprano. From 1905 onwards, Ricketts went to her recitals and met her several times; one of his letters to her has survived (to be published in the forthcoming edition of the complete letters). Though described as a lithograph, this is obviously a watercolour or an original drawing, heightened in watercolour. Ricketts's monogram 'CR' is in the lower right hand corner. The name underneath the image is probably not from his hand, but the dedication at the top certainly is.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
758. The Friendly Distance between Some Vale Artists
Only a handful of authors and artists created the contributions for the first issue of the magazine The Dial, issued by Shannon and Ricketts in 1889: Charles Ricketts, Charles Shannon, John Gray and Reginald Savage. Gray's contribution consisted of an essay and a story.
Although Thomas Sturge Moore had already met Shannon in 1885 and Ricketts two years later, he had not yet joined the Dial circle of writers and artists. He would not make his debut as a poet and essayist until 1892, in the second number of The Dial, when he immediately provided a striking number of contributions: one essay, nine poems (including a translation) and a story. The issue also contained three poems (including a translation) by Gray and introduced Lucien Pissarro and Herbert Horne as contributors.
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| Charles Shannon, Portrait of John Gray, lithograph (1896) [British Library: museum number: 1896,1028.25] [© The Trustees of the British Museum] [Shared under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) licence] |
This is confirmed by a late letter from Sturge Moore to Gordon Bottomley. On 20 November 1934, he wrote:
I hardly knew John Gray. I met him once at Christies just after the first Dial with poems by me came out and he was very flattering to me who felt very shabby by such a smart young man. And once I think he called for something at Holland Park but hardly stayed at all and then on my Scotch tour for a few minutes after his evening mass in his vicarage. We corresponded also very rarely.
The first meeting may have taken place shortly after February 1892 and the second one at the house of Ricketts and Shannon in Holland park (between 1902 and 1923). The last encounter must have been during Moore's tour of Scotland in March 1926, lecturing on the invitation of the Scottish Verse-Speaking Association.
Perhaps the cause of the distance between the two lay more with Gray than with Moore – even Ricketts wrote to publisher John Lane in the early 1890s that he saw Gray 'only very occasionally'.
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
757. Fan-Shaped Shannon Works Collected by John Russell Taylor
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| Charles Shannon, a naked woman, a child and a second woman, fan-shaped painting on silk (undated) |
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| Charles Shannon, two naked women at the beach, fan-shaped painting on silk (undated) |
The other silk painting (lot 224) depicts two naked women, also at the beach; the background has obviously darkened, like in many Shannon paintings.
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
756. A Trial Binding for The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891) [More Thoughts]
Last week's blog about a supposed trial copy of Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray lingered in my mind, as if there was still a loose thread (and there always is). Simon Wilson wrote to me with his thoughts on the matter, and in light of that, it might be good to explore the matter a little further. Of course, we find ourselves in the dangerous field of tempting assumptions and speculations.
The point is that the bookbinding and the decorations on the front cover may not always have formed a whole. Simon Wilson was puzzled by 'the very worn grey board with the title and decorations'.
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| Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891): 'trial binding' [Photo: Bonhams] |
We know that the vellum parts and the lettering on the spine were applied by Morley in Oxford, and that company was not involved in the production of the first edition of the book. They only became involved later.
Wilson continued:
Sometimes such proofs are indeed preserved, but this would mean that Ricketts had already submitted a sketch, that a block was made from it, and that he then rejected the result. Given his previously non-existent relationship with the publisher, this would have been difficult for him to do, and it is something he never actually did.
He was aware that a designer should not incur unnecessary costs for the publisher. He had learned this in his first year of training. This is one of the main reasons why I cannot accept that he is the creator of this curious design. The lettering is far too hesitant and even clumsy for him, whereas he had for years skilfully calligraphed texts for magazine commissions. I find the lettering typical of an imitator. But, of course, I may be wrong.
Why someone would go to the trouble of asking a bookbinder to follow the design in this way is something we may never find out.
Simon Wilson and I will have to agree to disagree, I suppose, and therefore I will quote his other comments as well, so that you may be the judge.
If it were the work of an imitator as you suggest, then what was their model? And if that model were a copy of the book as issued, then why completely change the design of the decorative devices? And from where would they get the idea of those complex constructions of dotted lines?
The book was not that rare at the time, it could be seen in a library or antiquarian bookshop. A hasty sketch would do the trick.
Simon Wilson also added:
Dorian was Ricketts's first published book design for Wilde so it would be unsurprising for him to take extra trouble over it.
This copy is an oddity. Perhaps it will be acquired by a collector who believes that it contains an original design by Ricketts? And, perhaps, it does.
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
755. A Trial Binding for The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891)
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| Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891): 'trial binding' [Photo: Bonhams] |
The original binding has proven to be fragile, and more than 130 years later, many copies have been restored or rebound.
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| Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891): detail of 'trial binding' [Photo: Bonhams] |
Ricketts designed various decorations for the regular and large paper editions, both for the spine and the front cover, while the spine decoration was also printed on the back cover of the deluxe edition.
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| Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891): detail of front cover |
Evidently an early trial copy? I am not so sure. It is striking that none of the details of the decoration or lettering correspond to the later design, which would mean that Ricketts came up with a completely different drawing during the design process. If so, he apparently decided to replace the dotted circles and stars in the title with others, redrawing all the letters and deciding not to let the tail of the “R” flow into the “Y”, because in the final design there is a small gap between that tail and the letter “Y”, whose tail points in the opposite direction. The characters in the “trial” are remarkably elongated compared to the later ones. The ten decorations below the title (in an inverted pyramid shape) also differ significantly from what Ricketts designed for the definitive binding.
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| Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891): spine (detail) Copy in the University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Assenberg Rare Book and Manuscript Library (PR 5819 A1 1891) |
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
754. Charles Shannon's Idylls of Rural Life
In addition to paintings, lithographs and a few etchings, Charles Shannon produced a series of twelve chiaroscuro woodcuts, which are sometimes believed to have been completed around 1898 when they were exhibited in E.J. van Wisselingh's Dutch Gallery in December 1898. However, the catalogue for that exhibition only mentions six, and the assumption that the other six were also exhibited at that time is incorrect.
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| Charles Shannon, 'Pegasus' (woodcut, 1898) [British Museum 1905,0826.6] [Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) license] |
Coral Snatchers
Fruit Pickers
December
The Oven
Another review, ‘The World of Art’, had appeared in The Glasgow Herald on 5 December 1898 and in this article three titles were mentioned (all listed in the catalogue): 'the beautiful cameo-like series of oval cuts printed in two colours on tinted paper – "Pegasus," "The Coral Snatchers," "The Oven," &c.'
A year later, in December 1899, the Catalogue of the Sixth Exhibition of the Arts & Crafts Exhibition Society also listed a couple of the Shannon woodcuts: 'Coral Snatchers', 'The Oven', 'Pegasus', 'Fruit Pickers', 'December' and 'Dead Leaves', exactly the same as had been shown the year before. None of the other six woodcut was mentioned or shown.
This is not a coincidence, it simply points to the fact that the other six woodcuts did not yet exist.
On 3 December 1898 the poets and playwrights Katharine Bradley and Edith Cooper (who wrote under the name Michael Field) went to visit the exhibition. They too saw the series of roundel woodcuts and mentioned some titles: in their diary entry:
The Coral-snatchers bring up their branches from the tragic darkness from wh: all labour must deliver wealth [...] Michael buys Shannon's Pegasus for me.
At first glance, it may be difficult to determine when the second series was created, although we are not entirely in the dark. Firstly, there is a catalogue from 1903, when John Baillie exhibited work by Ricketts, Shannon and Mrs L. Murray Robertson in his gallery at One Princes Terrace. Listed are eight of the twelve woodcuts:
Dead Leaves
The Oven
Fruit Pickers
The Garden Plot
Coral Divers
The Porch
December
Pegasus
This catalogue introduced two new works: ‘The Garden Plot’ and ‘The Porch’.
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| Charles Shannon, 'The Porch' (woodcut, 1901) [British Museum 1905,0826.6] [Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) license] |
Probably, these had been executed two years earlier, according to a diary note by Michael Field, who, at the time, were very close to Ricketts and Shannon. On 8 November 1901 they wrote about a dinner at their home attended by Ricketts and Shannon:
During the afternoon Shannon's six latest woodcuts had arrived from the framer's & were laid in the embrowning sunset. Now Shannon puts them as they are to be hung. Then we sit in the Whiter Room – the Artists on the little settee as close as they hang their pictures – we in full range, with our 'gemmy' creatures flashing on our silks
Here we clearly read that the second half of the series was completed at the end of 1901, although no titles are mentioned. This claim was later endorsed by Ricketts when, in 1913, he wrote to E.F. Strang, Keeper of the Department of Engraving, Illustration and Design of the Victoria & Albert Museum about their work.
I think you should mention in the case of our prints that Daphnis & Chloe was published 20 years ago. The print of the feast contains the portraits of the wood engravers Ricketts, Shannon, T. S. Moore, Pissar[r]o & Savage in fact all the original wood cutters of the time I think. Shannons Chiaroscuro prints were done in two batches the first set 18 years ago the second book about 15 or 14 years ago. I thought of this on seeing two of Shannon's old lithos at Kensington dating back 20 & 15 years near prints done a few months ago. How time flies!Wednesday, January 7, 2026
753. A Double Portrait as Cover Illustration
While clearing out last year's clippings, notes and emails, I came across a review of the novel Pijpelijntjes by Dutch author Jacob Israël de Haan. The story about the daily lives of two young gay men in the Amsterdam neighbourhood of De Pijp (hence the title Pijpelijntjes, lines or sketches of the neighbourhood) caused a scandal in 1904.
The review by Joost Ingen-Housz appeared in the weekly magazine De Groene Amsterdammer in a series of reviews of books set in Amsterdam, celebrating the city's 750th anniversary last year. The cover of a recent edition of the book was printed alongside it, and when I looked closely at the small picture, I recognised the heads of Ricketts and Shannon.
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| De Groene Amsterdammer, 14 august 2025 |
The double portrait is the renowned painting by Jacques-Émile Blanche, which is housed in the Tate in London.
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| Jacques-Émile Blanche, double portrait of Charles Ricketts and Charles Shannon (1904) [The Tate, London] |
Ricketts and Shannon sat for Blanche in Shannon's studio at Lansdowne House in July 1904. It is this portrait that was cut and reproduced rather darkly on the cover of Pijpelijntjes.
There is not much logic behind the use of this image. The subjects never met the Dutch author. The painting happens to date from the same year that De Haan published his novel, but the two protagonists' lodgings in De Pijp are worlds apart from the circumstances in which Ricketts and Shannon were living at the time: their spacious flat with two private studios was described as a palace full of art treasures. Although they were a couple as collectors and artists, by the time they were portrayed, Shannon was increasingly manifesting himself as a lover of women.
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| Cover of Jacob Israël de Haan, Pijpelijntjes (Diderot, 2023) |
In the book, the Rotterdam-based publisher Diderot has not included any explanation for this choice. In fact, the names of the painter and the sitters are missing, as is any acknowledgement of the text used, which has simply been taken from digitised versions of the novel.
Personally, I have a deep aversion to these kinds of easy-to-make books, with their uncaring design (meaning: no designer was involved), under the guise of 'saving masterpieces' (which De Haan's novel undoubtedly is), even though these novels don't need saving now that they are available digitally without restriction, at least where I live, and for as long as it lasts.
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
752. A New Year's Letter about Books
Do you keep in touch with the To-day and To-morrow series Kegan Paul. I find them most cheering & entertaining, some of them. Daedalus, Icarus, Tantalus Cassandra are remarkable. Platos American Republic & Narcissus most amusing. Even cranks like old Vernon Lee and Sylvia Pankhurst come out well. I have been greatly entertained by Haldane’s End of the World in his last book Possible Worlds.
[Letter to Sydney Cockerell, 3 January 1928: BL Add MS 52746, f 152]
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J.B.S. Haldane, Daedalus or Science and the Future. A Paper Read to the Heretics, Cambridge on February 4th, 1923. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd., 1923 |
J.B.S. Haldane, Daedalus or Science and the Future. A Paper Read to the Heretics, Cambridge on February 4th, 1923. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd., 1923;
Bertrand Russell, Icarus or The Future of Science. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd., 1924;
F.C.S. Schiller, Tantalus or the Future of Man. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd., 1924;
F.C.S. Schiller, Cassandra or The Future of the British Empire. Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd.; New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1926;
Douglas Woodruff, Plato’s American Republic. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd., 1927;
Gerald Heard, Narcissus. An Anatomy of Clothes. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd.; New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1924;
Vernon Lee, Proteus or The Future of Intelligence. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co.; New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1925;
E. Sylvia Pankhurst, Delphos. The Future of International Language. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd.; New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., [1927];
J.B.S. Haldane, Possible Worlds, and Other Essays. London: Chatto and Windus, 1927.
Ricketts was not the only enthusiastic reader; James Joyce also read the volumes. He borrowed them from Sylvia Beach's bookshop/lending library, Shakespeare & Co, and used them to find words for Finnegans Wake (see the article by Robbert-Jan Henkes and Mikio Fuse on Genetic Joyce Studies).
Wednesday, December 24, 2025
751. A Post-War Christmas
Your letter dated 13th arrived many days later; it has been on my table unanswered for countless good and bad reasons. Yes, the end came suddenly as a Japanese told me it would early in the war, yet the surprise was not what I should have imagined, nor even the sense of relief, the latter sensation has grown daily till, to-day Xmas, I am aware that something has been lifted from my life, yet, even now, old war habits continue – I pull down blinds, save bread; feel astonished at the return of old luxuries, – these by the way are few since the shortage of certain things is still a fact; paper for instance is rare, frames impossible, and probably for a long while artificial reasons will stop a return to normal things, let alone the danger of the Russian threat.
The signal of the Armistice found us without flags and, for several hours, our balcony was decorated with a banner I had painted for Jeanne d’Arc, in a stupid propaganda play, which happened to be in the cellars.
There was a prospect of change, thanks to Edmund Davis, who had offered them a second home outside London as a token of appreciation for their art advice. In the end, they would not be decorating a cottage, but a centuries-old tower, The Keep at Chilham Castle.
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| Chilham Castle Keep in 2021 [Photo © Phillip Halling, from: Geography.org.uk Creative Commons Attribution Share-alike license 2.0] |
A friend has promised us a small cottage in a lovely English village, Chilham near Canterbury. The spring may see us there, but it may take longer and, I fear the next year will see changes and troubles. Evil will not pass so readily. I hope next Xmas all this will seem like a pre-existence.
Wednesday, December 17, 2025
750. After Wilde
Merlin Holland's new book about his grandfather's legacy, After Oscar. The Legacy of a Scandal (Europa Editions) does contain one reference to Charles Ricketts (and none to Charles Shannon). His name features on page 211 and is not related to his designs for Wilde's works. It is mentioned in passing, introducing a letter from Robert Ross to Ricketts.
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| Merlin Holland, After Oscar (2025) |
I foresaw the result of the Billing case, & warned Grein not to bring the action. When the trial began everyone thought I was mad because I said Billing would be acquitted [….] Officials in the Treasury told me kindly but firmly that the subject was on my brain. Now they are absurdly astonished at the obvious. Billing & Douglas are the centre of a powerful & richly backed caucus of all the disgruntled people in England.
Ricketts's letter will be published next year in The Collected Letters of Charles Ricketts, edited by John Aplin and myself, and published in three volumes by Brill (see the Brill website).
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
749. A Fan by Charles Shannon
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| Charles Shannon, 'The Toilet' (lithograph, 1906) |
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
748. Salome's Bookshelf Published
On 31 October I received my copies of Salome's Bookshelf. Artists and Writers of the 1890s, edited by Simon Alexander Reynolds, a Shakespeare scholar. The book contains nine essays on Fernand Khnopff, Arthur Symons, Max Beerbohm, John Davidson, Charles Conder, Charles Ricketts, Walt Ruding, Oscar Wilde and Ernest Dowson, and is published by Greenwich Exchange (copies may be ordered at the publisher's website).
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| Salome's Bookshelf, cover (2025) |
The articles establish connections between literature, music and visual art. My article on Ricketts ('Charles Ricketts and Harmony Between Image and Text') discusses the way in which Ricketts combined (sometimes his own) texts and images at the beginning and end of his career, for example in the magazine The Dial, in Oscar Wilde's The Sphinx and in his later works, such as Beyond the Threshold.
Of the other essays, which introduce new perspectives, I was particularly struck by the article on Charles Conder by Samuel Shaw, who previously wrote about William Rothenstein and Edwardian culture in general.
The photographs for my essay were taken by Jos Uljee (The Hague). Below is a photograph of In the Key of Blue and Other Prose Essays, a different version of which is included in the book.
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| John Addington Symonds, In the Key of Blue and Other Prose Essays, cover design by Charles Ricketts (1893) [Photo: Jos Uljee] |
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
747. Dedication copies of An Ideal Husband (1899): Addenda
Blog 743 (29 October) contained a list of presentation copies of An Ideal Husband. It was incomplete, as could be expected: Oscar Wilde had written his publisher that he wanted around thirty presentation copies to be sent out in July 1899 (see Complete Letters, 2000, p. 1158-9). As follows:
[large paper (100 copies):]Robert Ross, Reginald Turner, Lord Alfred Douglas, More Adey, Charles Shannon
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| Oscar Wilde, dedication to André Gide in An Ideal Husband (1899) |
More dedication copies of An Ideal Husband (1899)
A. More Adey (1858-1942), British art critic and editor.
































