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 calligraphied 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.









