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Print - The Toilet of Lampito
  • The Toilet of Lampito
    Beardsley, Aubrey Vincent, born 1872 - died 1898
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The Toilet of Lampito

  • Object:

    Print

  • Place of origin:

    London, England (made)

  • Date:

    ca. 1929 (printed and published)

  • Artist/Maker:

    Beardsley, Aubrey Vincent, born 1872 - died 1898 (artist)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    Collotype print on paper

  • Credit Line:

    Given by Mr Vyvyan Holland

  • Museum number:

    E.744-1945

  • Gallery location:

    Prints & Drawings Study Room, level E, case I, shelf 50, box D

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Aubrey Beardsley's distinctive black and white drawings for Oscar Wilde's Salomé, published in 1894, brought him an extraordinary notoriety whilst still in his early twenties. His work for the periodical The Yellow Book confirmed his position as the most innovative illustrator of the day, but as a result of the hostile moralistic outcry that followed the arrest and trial of Oscar Wilde in early 1895, John Lane and other publishers panicked and dropped Beardsley. Thereafter, almost the only publisher who would use his drawings was Leonard Smithers. Smithers was a brilliant but shady character who operated on the fringes of the rare book trade, issuing small, clandestine editions of risqué books. He encouraged Beardsley's already growing interest in French, Latin and Greek texts of this kind and commissioned drawings to illustrate the Satires of the late Roman poet Juvenal and, most famously, Aristophanes's satirical play Lysistrata.

Beardsley's illustrations capture the amusing, bawdy quality of Aristophanes' text and also reveal the extent to which the artist had absorbed the frank humour of the early Greek vase-painters, whose work he had studied in the British Museum. This print comes from the folio of reproductions made directly from Beardsley's drawings published in about 1929. Utilising the expensive collotype process, these prints are much closer to the originals than the earlier line-block prints of the1896 edition of the book or the various, mostly very poor reproductions included in subsequent pirated printings.

Physical description

Black and white print shewing Lampito, an Athenian woman, naked except for stockings and slippers. Behind her, to the left, a diminutive figure with wings and bow and quiver (the attributes of Cupid), also naked, dusts Lampito's buttocks with a powder-puff in his right hand, whilst masturbating with his left.

Place of Origin

London, England (made)

Date

ca. 1929 (printed and published)

Artist/maker

Beardsley, Aubrey Vincent, born 1872 - died 1898 (artist)

Materials and Techniques

Collotype print on paper

Marks and inscriptions

Signed: AUBREY BEARDSLEY

Dimensions

Height: 251 mm image, Width: 171 mm image, Height: 343 mm sheet, Width: 250 mm sheet

Object history note

One of eight plates by Beardsley for The Lysistrata of Aristophanes London: Leonard Smithers, 1896.

Descriptive line

Collotype print after Aubrey Beardsley (1872-98), 'The Toilet of Lampito', illustration to The Lysistrata of Aristophanes, 1896.

Bibliographic References (Citation, Note/Abstract, NAL no)

Aristophanes. The Lysistrata of Aristophanes: now first wholly translated into English and illustrated with eight full page drawings by Aubrey Beardsley. London: L Smithers, 1896. 61pp, 8 plates. Brian Reade, Aubrey Beardsley, 1969, Cat. 461 Mark Samuels Lasner, A Selective Checklist of the Published Work of Aubery Beardsley, 1995, pp 67-8, cat 107 D.

Production Note

The collotype reproductions made from the original drawings in about 1929 can be recognised by the distinctive watermark in the paper comprising the initials AB in a circle.

Materials

Printing ink; Paper (fiber product)

Techniques

Collotype

Subjects depicted

Cupid; Arrows; Wings; Quiver; Stockings; Penis; Buttocks; Masturbation; Powder-puffs

Categories

Prints; Illustration

Collection code

PDP

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Qr_O132441
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