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A report on Wilde and period-related objects for sale. |
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No 51 : March 2009 |
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We apologise for the gap in production since number 50. _____ |
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For the
Table of Contents, click |
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Readers are invited to advertise (free)
for items sought or for sale / exchange. |
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Please mention THE OSCHOLARS if
ordering or inquiring, as this will help keep us on mailing lists. |
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We hope this page
will be an early port of call for those offering or seeking books on Wilde
and the fin-de-siècle; as well as Wilde memorabilia. It will, we also hope,
serve to chart fluctuating prices. Obviously it can never replace such
facilities as Abe or Amazon, but it should offer background to our other
pages. Booksellers are welcome to contact us at oscholars@gmail.com with lists of their 1890s material; or
with hyperlinks to the relevant section of their own on-line catalogues. |
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I.
PAROL
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PAROL is a Berlin fashion house run by Jeanette
Niebelschütz
and
Othmar Kaufmann, that designs and produces limited editions of
scarves. Sentences, aperçus and bonmots are knitted into these. |
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Have a look at http://www.parol-accessoires.de/blog/2009/10/oscar-wilde-16-10-1954/ and see the items in the Online-shop Oscar
Wilde Temptation classic, Oscar
Wilde Temptation florafil, Oscar
Wilde chestnut, Oscar
Wilde black. |
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[We are happy to recommend this. – Editor, THE OSCHOLARS] |
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II.
POSTERS
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Footlights Gallery & Gifts specialises in
theatre posters, 240 East Main Street, Ashland, OR 97520, USA, Phone &
Fax: 541-488-5538 (Voice: 10 a.m.- 6 p.m. Pacific Time, 18:00-2:00 UTC) (Fax:
24 hours) E-mail: footlite@cdsnet.net. We have over many issues shown here posters
that they sell with a fin-de-siècle theme, but for this issue as with our
last two, we were unable to raise their website (http://www.footlightsgallery.com/) as usual. We must assume that they are no longer in
business. |
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The Vintage Poster Company has a good selection from the fin-de-siècle. |
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Artist:
Anonymous Artists |
Artist:
Emile Clouet |
Artist: (Jean
de Paléologue) PAL |
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The company AllPosters has a selection of Wilde-related (and other) posters,
prints and photographs that it sells on-line. This month we concentrate on
Dorian Gray: |
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Illustration
from The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde |
Oscar
with Copy of Dorian Gray |
Dorian
Gray Lies Dead with a Knife in His Heart |
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The
Picture of Dorian Gray, Donna Reed, Hurd Hatfield, 1945 |
Artists
Malvin Albright and Ivan Albright, Working on their Portrait of "Dorian
Gray" |
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AllPosters
also offer a number of Sarah Bernhardt posters and prints, of which we will
be showing one in each issue of THE
OSCHOLARS. |
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Sarah Bernhardt in the Role of Junie in
"Britannicus" by Jean Racine circa 1860 |
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Here too is a poster of
Paul Verlaine: |
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Verlaine in L'Assiette au Beurre 1907 |
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The AllPosters
site can be reached by clicking on the picture below, which is one of those
that is also currently for sale. |
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We also draw
readers’ attention to the International
Poster Gallery, which specialises in Vintage posters, though the use of
this term is rather imprecise. We here
select four, apologising for the quality of reproduction. They can be seen much more clearly on the
International Poster Gallery’s website (click the banner). |
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Meunier, Georges |
Misti |
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Roedel |
Cheret, Jules |
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MovieGoods
describes itself as ‘the place for posters and other items from all the
hottest new movies’, and also sells theatre posters and playbills. Here is one, the 1971 Dorian Gray. |
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III.
BOOKSellerS
& PUBLISHERS
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Girasole Books of
Oxford are offering a small but mouthwatering selection of Wilde books
through Abe. |
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One of the very
few |
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Galignani’s, 224 rue de Rivoli, is a few steps from
the Hôtel Wagram (now no longer an hotel), where the Wildes stayed on their
honeymoon. The oldest English bookshop on the Continent, one imagines that it
has changed little to-day. The photograph is of Charles Jeancourt Galignani,
the proprietor in Wilde’s day. Click
the photograph for Galignani’s splendid website. |
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Wilde also used
the American bookshop in Paris, Brentano’s. This branch of the U.S. firm was opened by
Arthur Brentano in 1895, at 37 Avenue de 1'Opera and extending through to rue
des Petits Champs (now rue Danielle Casanova), where it remains to-day;
although its unprepossessing interior and inferior stock hardly suggests its
distinguished past. It is no longer
part of the Brentano’s chain. |
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We also like to
commend the following bookshops because they salute Oscar Wilde. We are
interested to know of others. |
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Oscar Wilde
Buchhandlung und Versand at Alte Gasse 51, 60313 Frankfurt Tel.:
069/28 12 60 Fax: 069/297 75 42. Internet: http://www.oscar-wilde.de; e-mail: shop@oscar-wilde.de. |
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Dorian Bookstore, 802 Elm at |
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The Oscar Wilde Book Shop ( |
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Also specialising in the fin-de-siècle is Le Lien et le Ligne, the bookshop of M. Bruno Leclercq, which can be found by clicking its banner. This is more than an on-line bookseller, more of a site dedicated to its subject by an enthusiast. |
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We also recommend
another French site, Edition Originale,
which is that of the bookshop Le Feu Follet, |
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Nangle Rare Books sells ‘rare books, antiquarian books, old
books, second hand books, first edition books’ and specifically lists Oscar Wilde as an author in which it specialises. |
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Offstage Bookshop opened in 1982 as |
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Offstage has a website, www.offstagebooks.com which offers customers a worldwide mail order service. Offstage also provides offsite bookstalls at festivals and conferences for teachers and practitioners |
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We also draw your
attention to The Peacock Mirror
which offers on-line a selection of books, prints and other products focusing
on Pre-Raphaelite, Symbolist and fin-de-siècle art. For a while off the
screen, it has now returned in revived spirits – or so we wrote in January 2008; in May we
found it closed once more; on 10th July it was functioning but on 28th October it had again closed ‘for maintenance’, remaining so when we
checked on 5th December; and
on 7th January, 8th March and 3rd July 2009. Click the image
right for the website: it had revived as of 15th March 2010. |
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IV. Publishers |
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We here add the names of independent publishers who specialise in the
books of the period. We plan gradually to increase this list and hope readers
across the world will assist. |
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The Rivendale Press, our own publisher, gets special mention.
Its list can be found at http://www.rivendalepress.com/index.html. |
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Arts & Crafts Press. Founded by Bruce Smith & Yoshiko Yamamoto, this is a small publishing house producing books and other works of interest to those concerned with the Arts and Crafts movement. All the publications of The Arts & Crafts Press are letterpress printed and bound by hand. |
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Callum James Books. Mr James writes that his imprint ‘arose out of my frustration as a collector that many of the texts I wanted to read were difficult to find and very expensive. In 2005 I decided to put out a small booklet-format edition of Boris Orloff by the Rev'd E. E. Bradford and when this went well, other items followed in a similar limited edition format. My aim was then, and still is now, to provide items of a high enough quality to interest the collector whilst remaining affordable enough to be of use to researchers and the general reader. Although my list of titles is clearly biased towards material by and about Frederick Rolfe (aka Baron Corvo), I have a wider interest in Victorian and Edwardian gay literature and occasionally publish those things which have for some other reason caught my attention and imagination. Nearly everything published by Callum James books is either hard to find in the original or is much more expensive on the antiquarian/secondhand market – or both. What started as a hobby in 2005 is now a small business, our publications are now in a number of university and public libraries, we deal with established bookdealers all over the world and we were recently mentioned in The Rare Book Review. Plans for 2008 include the continued publication of our Raven Series of monographs about the life and work of Frederick Rolfe by Robert Scoble. Also to expand the line of conventionally printed hardback books which was started this year with Aspects of Wilde by Vincent O'Sullivan. A number of publications are also in hand relating to Frederick Rolfe, Forrest Reid, A J A Symons, Sheridan LeFanu, Vincent O'Sullivan, E E Bradford, Arnold Smith and a number of others. |
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The Genge Press is a small press set up in
2003 by Sue Lloyd, BA, MPhil, to publish mainly books by or about Edmond
Rostand (1868–1918), creator of the play Cyrano de Bergerac (1897).
All publications are available commercially or direct from the Genge Press
via their website, http://www.gengepress.co.uk/ This also contains a brief biography of
Rostand and a comprehensive Bibliography of his works, including editions of
his plays in English; studies of the poet and his work in French and English;
music inspired by his plays, and major performances of the plays in France
and abroad. The
Genge Press, 45 Quay Street, Minehead, Somerset, TA24 5UL gengepress@aol.com;
tel +44 (0)1643 706461. |
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Hippocampus Press specialises in horror
fiction, largely outside our interest, but including some Victorian ghost, gothic
and horror material. An easily read website contains their list. |
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Tartarus Press is a small, independent publishing house in
Yorkshire, specialising in interesting fiction from the past and present.
Titles cross various genres and are often of an unusual nature, which means
that they may have been overlooked by mainstream publishers. All evoke a
sense of wonder or the supernatural in beautiful, exciting prose. It aims for
the highest literary standards and production values. Limited edition
hardback books are printed lithographically, bound in sewn sections, and
using high quality acid-free paper. Most titles have original dust jacket
artwork and many have decorated, embossed boards. A fine website is maintained. |
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Tragara Press has a website currently (15th March 2010) under construction; we
recommend the bibliography compiled by Steven
Halliwell. See http://www.rivendalepress.com/tp.html |
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The True Bill Press is an independent press specializing in reprints of 18th and 19th century classic works that are currently out-of-print and generally inaccessible. The Press was begun in 2006 and plans to publish about three titles a year. Recommendations for titles suitable for publication will be gratefully received. Tony Simpson, the publisher and editor-in-chief, is Professor Emeritus at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. He established the Press after retiring after 37 years as a librarian at this College and as a faculty member on the Ph.D. program in Criminal Justice of the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He has published extensively in the fields of information-finding, public administration, and 18th and 19th century English social and legal history. Website. |
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Valancourt Books is an independent small
(micro) press founded in March 2005 and presently based in Kansas City,
specializing in quality new editions of rare literature from the 18th, 19th
and early 20th centuries. In their own words ‘Gothic Classics, our flagship series, reprints rare Gothic
fiction from the 1790s to the 1820s.
Many of the titles in the series existed in fewer than five copies
worldwide before our new editions; scholars and readers interested in reading
these wonderful texts were forced to travel thousands of miles to a
university rare book room or pay thousands of dollars to obtain a copy from
an antiquarian bookseller. Forthcoming
volumes in the series will include works by Charles Robert Maturin. Valancourt Classics seeks out
unjustly forgotten literary classics and makes them newly available in
annotated scholarly editions. Recent
volumes to appear in this series include Arthur Conan Doyle's Round the
Red Lamp (1894), and Forrest Reid's The Garden God (1905). We have a new series of popular literature of the 1890s, which spotlights lesser-known
works by celebrated writers like Bram Stoker, Arthur Conan Doyle, and H.
Rider Haggard and resurrects forgotten bestsellers by such authors as Marie
Corelli, Hall Caine, and Bertram Mitford.
Finally, although we do our best to seek out all the older books
deserving republication, we sometimes miss one, and we always welcome
suggestions as to new additions to our catalogue.’ Consult their website
for more information. |
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Victorian Secrets revives neglected 19th century works and makes them available to scholars and general readers alike. New titles are under development all the time. View the catalogue for an up-to-date listing. If you would like to suggest a title for publication, contact them at suggestions@victoriansecrets.co.uk. Titles can be made available in large print or different bindings, if required. |
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Woodstock Books publishes literary reprints for the
academic library market and for general readers and students. Notable is their list of Decadents, Symbolists,
Anti-Decadents: Poetry of the 1890s, a series chosen and
introduced by R.K.R. Thornton and
Ian Small. |
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Previously in THE OSCHOLARS we
have mentioned books published by Mondial. Its list can be consulted at http://www.mondial.com. |
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V.
EBAY
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Ebay is an on-line auction house where many Wilde items are offered, from second-hand paperbacks to playbills
to limited editions: 2,367
items when we looked for this issue, compared with 1,264 for the previous one
and 856 for the one before. This link –––-> will take you straight to ebay's Wilde pages. Be prepared for some ridiculous prices. |
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This month we
select for illustration the following, which were recently on offer: |
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This delightful collection of 13 Volumes for titles by Oscar Wilde - also includes a volume on the life of Wilde. This is a Limited Edition Set - Limited to 1000. Boston/New York: Brainard 1909. 8 1/4 inches by 6 inches. Approximations only. The Binding is Half Morocco Leather. Marbled boards. Gilt titles to spine. Gilt top edge. |
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Oscar Wilde, The
Complete Works of Oscar Wilde, Edition De Luxe Limited to 1000 Sets. This set
is Number 565. (New York: National
Library Company, [1909]) Complete in 10 volumes 8vo (8 1/2" x
6"). Vol. 1, Duchess of Padua & An Ideal Husband ;
Vol. 2, Salome & Importance of
Being Earnest ; Vol. 3, The House of Pomegranates & The Happy Prince and
Other Tales; Vol. 4, Reviews ; Vol. 5, Poems & The Ballad of Reading Gaol
; Vol. 6, Miscellanies ; Vol. 7,
Intentions ; Vol. 8, Lord Author Saville's Crime [siced. THE OSCHOLARS] The Portrait of Mr. W. H. ; Vol. 9, Lady
Windermere's Fan & A Woman of No Importance ; Vol. 10, The Picture of
Dorian Gray. Bound in 3/4 custom hand
tooled maroon leather, beige heavy linen boards ruled in gilt, dual
contrasting spine labels gilt, top edge gilt, others uncut. Title pages in red and black. Illustrated with HAND COLORED tissue
guarded frontis illustrations and additional black & white full page
plates by Aubrey Beardsley and other illustrators. Text printed on Aldus Deluxe heavy rag
watermarked paper. FIRST EDITION THUS,
LIMITED EDITION |
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Fantastic top quality keyrings for sale ~ not budget ones. |
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This item is a brand new pair of hand made dangly light weight button earrings. Materials used are: 1 inch diameter steel buttons with a a flat steel rear side (no pin on back), high quality silver plated earwires & findings, all presented in a clear gift bag. |
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The Modern Library New York Edition. Bound in one Volume. The Picture of Dorian Gray & De Profundis by Oscar Wilde. Introduction. Copyright, 1926 by The Modern Library 357 Pages 18.5cm x 12.5cm |
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Descriptions are
those of the sellers, and without any reason for disbelief, nonetheless THE
OSCHOLARS cannot vouch for their accuracy (while sometimes appreciating their
quaintness). |
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VI.
shopping
wildely...
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Oscar Wilde Chair by Jean-Charles de Castelbajac |
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Oscar Wilde Mug by Brainburst Designs: |
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‘In England people
actually try to be brilliant at breakfast, That is so dreadful of them. Only
dull people are brilliant at breakfast.’ |
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‘Happy Prince’ notecards, available from Laura Makes Pictures |
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‘A most unlikely
object’ |
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Mr Peter Newton contributed the following to the discussion group oscarwilde@yahoogroups.com in March 2009: |
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Lyon & Trunbull, auctioneers in Edinburgh, have just sold an ivory handled walking cane 'reputedly once the property of Oscar Wilde' for almost £8,000 |
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It is a most unlikely object. The handle has the letters 'OW, C33' Not, you will observe, C.3.3. It is astonishing that a 'collector in the South of England' should pay such a sum, and that other bidders were also after the item |
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Wilde never referred to himself as C33 when in exile and never wrote any letters signed C33. He adopted the name Sebastian Melmoth and used that name, and the initials SM. Friends gave him items with those initials. Surely no-one would have presented him with a cane with C33 on it, and he would certainly never have commissioned one himself. |
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There is no reference to any such item in Wilde's letters or any biography or memoirs. |
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I do hope that the collector has some reliable information about the cane, and it would be wonderful if he would share it with us. But somehow I doubt it! |
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For the
Table of Contents, click |
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