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Oscar Wilde's tomb

Oscar Wilde's tomb is located in Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris, France. It took nine to ten months to complete by the sculptor Jacob Epstein, with an accompanying plinth by Charles Holden[1] and an inscription carved by Joseph Cribb.[2] As of the 50th anniversary of Wilde's death, the tomb also contains the ashes of Robert Ross[3], Wilde's lover and literary executor.[4]

Oscar Wilde's tomb
The tomb in 2009 (pre-barrier)
ArtistJacob Epstein
YearAugust 1914 (1914-08)
TypeCarving
MediumHopton Wood stone
LocationPère Lachaise Cemetery, Paris, France
Coordinates48°51′43″N 2°23′53″E / 48.861889°N 2.398139°E / 48.861889; 2.398139

Commission edit

In 1908 Oscar Wilde's literary executor Robert Ross[3] chose Jacob Epstein for the commission of the tomb at a cost of two thousand pounds, which had been anonymously donated for this purpose.[5] Later, in a publication of letters between Ada Leverson and Ross in 1930, Letters to the Sphinx, the anonymous donor was revealed to be Helen Carew, with financial assistance from novelist Stephen Hudson (Sydney Schiff).[5] This was only Epstein's second commission, his first being the sculpture for the Holden-designed British Medical Association building in The Strand; these had been severely criticised for being too sexualised for public consumption. However, Epstein retained some noteworthy supporters within the Wilde circle such as William Rothenstein.[6]

About the tomb edit

The choice of Oscar Wilde's monument created controversy. Wilde's supporters would have liked for the monument to derive in some way from Wilde's works, such as "The Young King", by invoking homoerotica with figures of forlorn Greek youths, whereas Wilde's detractors believed he was deserving of no monument at all.[7] One can see the influences of Wilde's works in Epstein's original sketches for the tomb, which feature two young men, heads downcast in an image of grief and sorrow upon an empty stone stele. However, Epstein has said of his sketches of the tomb that he "was dissatisfied and scrapped quite completed work".[5]

It has been suggested that the change in design plans are due to Epstein's new focus on Wilde's poem "The Sphinx".[3] However, a number of influences began to play on Epstein around this period, including that of fellow sculptor Eric Gill.[8] The two artists were deeply interested in what they saw as the more primal sexuality of Indian and Egyptian art, as opposed to British art. Pennington refers to this period in Epstein's work as the Sun Temple period and claims that, having been unable to follow this path with some of his works in Britain, Epstein transferred his new passion onto the Wilde tomb.[9]

The monument began as a 20-tonne block of Hopton Wood stone in Derbyshire, England, unveiled to the London press in June 1912.[10] Epstein devised a vast winged figure, a messenger swiftly moving with vertical wings, giving the feeling of forward flight; the conception was purely symbolical, the conception of a poet as a messenger, but many people tried to read into it a portrait of Oscar Wilde.[11]

In the original sketches, the influences have been linked to the winged Assyrian bulls in the British Museum.[12] The small angel figure behind the ear of the Sphinx may have been a deliberate reference by Epstein to the verse in Wilde's poem The Sphinx: "sing me all your memories".[10] Upon the headdress there are five figures, one with a crucifix, perhaps symbolising the martyrdom of Oscar Wilde; this may be a recurring theme—Epstein may have chosen the Sphinx with a crucified figure upon the headdress in reference to the sensual life choice of Wilde thinly veiled by his Catholicism.[13] In Epstein's original sketchings there is a list of ten sins, however none are recognisable clearly on the final monument apart from the Egyptian-like helmet haircuts on the women.[14]

On the finished stone monument the small angel behind the ear has been removed and replaced by an elaborate headdress, the crucified figure and the phallic sphinx have been removed, and in their place is a personification of fame being trumpeted.[15] This may have been Epstein landing on a less sentimental, carved and angular alternative.[3]

Whilst transporting the monument to the cemetery in France from his Cheyne Walk studios in London, Epstein ran into trouble with the police—having rejected its status as a work of art, French customs placed a punishing import duty of £120 on the monument for the value of the stone.[16] Once the bill was paid (it has been suggested that Robert Ross had borrowed the funds from Ada Leverson),[17] the monument was covered with tarpaulin due to the Parisian officials' reaction to the monument's nudity. Epstein returned to the cemetery one evening and found that the testicles on the statue had been covered by plaster, as the size of the testicles was considered unusual.[5] The monument was under police surveillance and Epstein found he could only continue his work upon it after bribing a police officer to look away, but the work was sporadic and the tarpaulin was replaced at night.[18] Eventually, as compromise, under Robert Ross' instruction, a bronze plaque similar to the shape of a butterfly was placed upon the testicles of the monument and it was unveiled in early August 1914 by the occultist and poet Aleister Crowley. Epstein was furious that his work had been altered without his consent and refused to attend the unveiling.[19] A few weeks later Aleister Crowley approached Epstein in a café in Paris, and around his neck was a bronze butterfly—he informed Epstein that his work was now on display as he intended.[20]

The testicles were removed in an act of vandalism in 1961.[21] It is said that the cemetery manager used them as a paperweight.[22] They are now missing.[23] In 2000, Leon Johnson, a multimedia artist, installed a silver prosthesis to replace them.[24]

 
The tomb with modern glass barrier

The epitaph is a verse from The Ballad of Reading Gaol:[25]

And alien tears will fill for him
    Pity's long-broken urn,
For his mourners will be outcast men,
    And outcasts always mourn.

Kissing the Tomb edit

Today the monument is viewed by thousands of visitors every year. A tradition developed whereby visitors would kiss the tomb after applying lipstick to their mouth, thereby leaving a "print" of their kiss.[22] The stone has also been covered in graffiti, almost exclusively letters of love to the author, but this is not as damaging as the lipstick kisses. Lipstick contains animal fat, which sinks into the stone and causes permanent damage.[26] Cleaning operations to remove the lipstick grease have caused the stone to become more porous. It is therefore even harder to clean in subsequent attempts, necessitating more drastic and surface-damaging procedures.[27] A fine of 9,000 euros was created to deter fans, but as many of them were tourists who could leave before being brought to court this did little to stop the practice.[28] In 2011, the creation of a glass barrier was begun, to make the monument 'kiss-proof'.[29][30] It was completed in 2014.[31] However, it only covers the lower half of the tomb. As Ireland's Office of Public Works considers the tomb an Irish monument overseas, it has paid for the cleaning and the barrier.[27]

The act of kissing the tomb has inspired a varied response from Oscar Wilde's supporters. Wilde's grandson Merlin Holland, who is partially responsible for the tomb's upkeep, has said on the subject that "Unthinking vulgar people have defaced the tomb forever."[26] The producer Marc Overton, who views Wilde as a personal hero, has been quoted saying he found the lipstick kisses disgusting. On the other side of this discussion, the architectural historian Lisa Marie has called this an act of devotion and a "fitting monument to a great decadent and aesthete."[32] Two years after the barrier was erected, Stephen Fry mentioned the practice of kissing Oscar Wilde's tomb in a speech on Wilde given at the Jaipur Literature Festival:

Here's this man who believed when he died that his name would be toxic for generations to come. For hundreds of years his work wouldn't be read. He would stand for nothing but perversion. Utter disgust of a society that couldn't bear people like him.....His tomb in Père Lachaise Cemetery, in Paris. It had to be restored because the polished stone of its surface had corroded through kissing. Thousand and thousands. .... Wouldn't it be allowed once to just wake him up for five minutes just to tell him that, then he can go back to sleep again?[33]

Sketches edit

A number of Epstein's sketches for the work have survived, some in private collections[34][10] and some in galleries,[35] including a profile of the side view in the Garman Ryan Collection at The New Art Gallery Walsall.[36]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 42.
  2. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 50.
  3. ^ a b c d Cork, Richard (1999). Jacob Epstein. Tate Gallery Publishing. p. 20. ISBN 978-0691029450.
  4. ^ "The Scandal of the Tomb of Oscar Wilde". Oscar Wilde House. 29 November 2021. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  5. ^ a b c d Pennington (1987), p. 6.
  6. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 14.
  7. ^ Haskell (1931), p. 19.
  8. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 27.
  9. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 29.
  10. ^ a b c Pennington (1987), p. 32.
  11. ^ Haskell (1931), p. 20.
  12. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 33.
  13. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 37.
  14. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 36.
  15. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 41.
  16. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 46.
  17. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 48.
  18. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 53.
  19. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 54.
  20. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 55.
  21. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 59.
  22. ^ a b Tagliabue, John (16 December 2011). "Walling Off Oscar Wilde's Tomb From Admirers' Kisses". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  23. ^ Pennington (1987), pp. 61–62.
  24. ^ Johnson, Leon (2000). . Archived from the original on 3 September 2006. Retrieved 2 September 2011.
  25. ^ Ellmann, Richard (1988). Oscar Wilde. New York: Vintage Books. p. 553. ISBN 978-0-394-75984-5.
  26. ^ a b "Scarlet kisses of death for Oscar's tomb". the Guardian. 28 October 2000. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  27. ^ a b "Oscar Wilde's lipstick-covered Paris tomb to be protected". The Guardian. 27 November 2011.
  28. ^ Peralta, Eyder (28 November 2011). "A Kiss No More: Oscar Wilde's Tomb Will Be Protected From Smooches". NPR. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  29. ^ "Oscar Wilde's restored tomb is unveiled in Paris". BBC Online. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  30. ^ Pearce, Gary (6 December 2011). "Important we should still hear the call of the Wilde". ABC News. Retrieved 18 June 2019.
  31. ^ #JLF 2016: Fry on Wilde, retrieved 7 April 2022
  32. ^ Paris, John Tagliabue (25 December 2011). "Oscar Wilde's adored tomb sealed from loving kisses". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  33. ^ #JLF 2016: Fry on Wilde, retrieved 7 April 2022
  34. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 30.
  35. ^ Pennington (1987), p. 35.
  36. ^ "Study for the Tomb of Oscar Wilde". The New Art Gallery Walsall. Retrieved 5 May 2013.

Sources edit

  • Haskell, Epstein (1931). The Sculptor Speaks. London: William Heinemann.
  • Pennington, Michael (1987). An Angel for a Martyr – Jacob Epstein's tomb for Oscar Wilde. Whitenights Press. ISBN 978-0704901131.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Grave of Oscar Wilde and Robert Baldwin Ross at Wikimedia Commons
  • Pencil study for the tomb at The New Art Gallery Walsall
  • "Wilde's Tomb" at The Poetry Foundation

oscar, wilde, tomb, located, père, lachaise, cemetery, paris, france, took, nine, months, complete, sculptor, jacob, epstein, with, accompanying, plinth, charles, holden, inscription, carved, joseph, cribb, 50th, anniversary, wilde, death, tomb, also, contains. Oscar Wilde s tomb is located in Pere Lachaise Cemetery Paris France It took nine to ten months to complete by the sculptor Jacob Epstein with an accompanying plinth by Charles Holden 1 and an inscription carved by Joseph Cribb 2 As of the 50th anniversary of Wilde s death the tomb also contains the ashes of Robert Ross 3 Wilde s lover and literary executor 4 Oscar Wilde s tombThe tomb in 2009 pre barrier ArtistJacob EpsteinYearAugust 1914 1914 08 TypeCarvingMediumHopton Wood stoneLocationPere Lachaise Cemetery Paris FranceCoordinates48 51 43 N 2 23 53 E 48 861889 N 2 398139 E 48 861889 2 398139 Contents 1 Commission 2 About the tomb 2 1 Kissing the Tomb 3 Sketches 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Sources 6 External linksCommission editIn 1908 Oscar Wilde s literary executor Robert Ross 3 chose Jacob Epstein for the commission of the tomb at a cost of two thousand pounds which had been anonymously donated for this purpose 5 Later in a publication of letters between Ada Leverson and Ross in 1930 Letters to the Sphinx the anonymous donor was revealed to be Helen Carew with financial assistance from novelist Stephen Hudson Sydney Schiff 5 This was only Epstein s second commission his first being the sculpture for the Holden designed British Medical Association building in The Strand these had been severely criticised for being too sexualised for public consumption However Epstein retained some noteworthy supporters within the Wilde circle such as William Rothenstein 6 About the tomb editThe choice of Oscar Wilde s monument created controversy Wilde s supporters would have liked for the monument to derive in some way from Wilde s works such as The Young King by invoking homoerotica with figures of forlorn Greek youths whereas Wilde s detractors believed he was deserving of no monument at all 7 One can see the influences of Wilde s works in Epstein s original sketches for the tomb which feature two young men heads downcast in an image of grief and sorrow upon an empty stone stele However Epstein has said of his sketches of the tomb that he was dissatisfied and scrapped quite completed work 5 It has been suggested that the change in design plans are due to Epstein s new focus on Wilde s poem The Sphinx 3 However a number of influences began to play on Epstein around this period including that of fellow sculptor Eric Gill 8 The two artists were deeply interested in what they saw as the more primal sexuality of Indian and Egyptian art as opposed to British art Pennington refers to this period in Epstein s work as the Sun Temple period and claims that having been unable to follow this path with some of his works in Britain Epstein transferred his new passion onto the Wilde tomb 9 The monument began as a 20 tonne block of Hopton Wood stone in Derbyshire England unveiled to the London press in June 1912 10 Epstein devised a vast winged figure a messenger swiftly moving with vertical wings giving the feeling of forward flight the conception was purely symbolical the conception of a poet as a messenger but many people tried to read into it a portrait of Oscar Wilde 11 In the original sketches the influences have been linked to the winged Assyrian bulls in the British Museum 12 The small angel figure behind the ear of the Sphinx may have been a deliberate reference by Epstein to the verse in Wilde s poem The Sphinx sing me all your memories 10 Upon the headdress there are five figures one with a crucifix perhaps symbolising the martyrdom of Oscar Wilde this may be a recurring theme Epstein may have chosen the Sphinx with a crucified figure upon the headdress in reference to the sensual life choice of Wilde thinly veiled by his Catholicism 13 In Epstein s original sketchings there is a list of ten sins however none are recognisable clearly on the final monument apart from the Egyptian like helmet haircuts on the women 14 On the finished stone monument the small angel behind the ear has been removed and replaced by an elaborate headdress the crucified figure and the phallic sphinx have been removed and in their place is a personification of fame being trumpeted 15 This may have been Epstein landing on a less sentimental carved and angular alternative 3 Whilst transporting the monument to the cemetery in France from his Cheyne Walk studios in London Epstein ran into trouble with the police having rejected its status as a work of art French customs placed a punishing import duty of 120 on the monument for the value of the stone 16 Once the bill was paid it has been suggested that Robert Ross had borrowed the funds from Ada Leverson 17 the monument was covered with tarpaulin due to the Parisian officials reaction to the monument s nudity Epstein returned to the cemetery one evening and found that the testicles on the statue had been covered by plaster as the size of the testicles was considered unusual 5 The monument was under police surveillance and Epstein found he could only continue his work upon it after bribing a police officer to look away but the work was sporadic and the tarpaulin was replaced at night 18 Eventually as compromise under Robert Ross instruction a bronze plaque similar to the shape of a butterfly was placed upon the testicles of the monument and it was unveiled in early August 1914 by the occultist and poet Aleister Crowley Epstein was furious that his work had been altered without his consent and refused to attend the unveiling 19 A few weeks later Aleister Crowley approached Epstein in a cafe in Paris and around his neck was a bronze butterfly he informed Epstein that his work was now on display as he intended 20 The testicles were removed in an act of vandalism in 1961 21 It is said that the cemetery manager used them as a paperweight 22 They are now missing 23 In 2000 Leon Johnson a multimedia artist installed a silver prosthesis to replace them 24 nbsp The tomb with modern glass barrier The epitaph is a verse from The Ballad of Reading Gaol 25 And alien tears will fill for him Pity s long broken urn For his mourners will be outcast men And outcasts always mourn Kissing the Tomb edit Today the monument is viewed by thousands of visitors every year A tradition developed whereby visitors would kiss the tomb after applying lipstick to their mouth thereby leaving a print of their kiss 22 The stone has also been covered in graffiti almost exclusively letters of love to the author but this is not as damaging as the lipstick kisses Lipstick contains animal fat which sinks into the stone and causes permanent damage 26 Cleaning operations to remove the lipstick grease have caused the stone to become more porous It is therefore even harder to clean in subsequent attempts necessitating more drastic and surface damaging procedures 27 A fine of 9 000 euros was created to deter fans but as many of them were tourists who could leave before being brought to court this did little to stop the practice 28 In 2011 the creation of a glass barrier was begun to make the monument kiss proof 29 30 It was completed in 2014 31 However it only covers the lower half of the tomb As Ireland s Office of Public Works considers the tomb an Irish monument overseas it has paid for the cleaning and the barrier 27 The act of kissing the tomb has inspired a varied response from Oscar Wilde s supporters Wilde s grandson Merlin Holland who is partially responsible for the tomb s upkeep has said on the subject that Unthinking vulgar people have defaced the tomb forever 26 The producer Marc Overton who views Wilde as a personal hero has been quoted saying he found the lipstick kisses disgusting On the other side of this discussion the architectural historian Lisa Marie has called this an act of devotion and a fitting monument to a great decadent and aesthete 32 Two years after the barrier was erected Stephen Fry mentioned the practice of kissing Oscar Wilde s tomb in a speech on Wilde given at the Jaipur Literature Festival Here s this man who believed when he died that his name would be toxic for generations to come For hundreds of years his work wouldn t be read He would stand for nothing but perversion Utter disgust of a society that couldn t bear people like him His tomb in Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris It had to be restored because the polished stone of its surface had corroded through kissing Thousand and thousands Wouldn t it be allowed once to just wake him up for five minutes just to tell him that then he can go back to sleep again 33 Sketches editA number of Epstein s sketches for the work have survived some in private collections 34 10 and some in galleries 35 including a profile of the side view in the Garman Ryan Collection at The New Art Gallery Walsall 36 See also editList of sculptures by Jacob EpsteinReferences editNotes edit Pennington 1987 p 42 Pennington 1987 p 50 a b c d Cork Richard 1999 Jacob Epstein Tate Gallery Publishing p 20 ISBN 978 0691029450 The Scandal of the Tomb of Oscar Wilde Oscar Wilde House 29 November 2021 Retrieved 29 April 2024 a b c d Pennington 1987 p 6 Pennington 1987 p 14 Haskell 1931 p 19 Pennington 1987 p 27 Pennington 1987 p 29 a b c Pennington 1987 p 32 Haskell 1931 p 20 Pennington 1987 p 33 Pennington 1987 p 37 Pennington 1987 p 36 Pennington 1987 p 41 Pennington 1987 p 46 Pennington 1987 p 48 Pennington 1987 p 53 Pennington 1987 p 54 Pennington 1987 p 55 Pennington 1987 p 59 a b Tagliabue John 16 December 2011 Walling Off Oscar Wilde s Tomb From Admirers Kisses The New York Times Retrieved 5 May 2013 Pennington 1987 pp 61 62 Johnson Leon 2000 Re membering Wilde Archived from the original on 3 September 2006 Retrieved 2 September 2011 Ellmann Richard 1988 Oscar Wilde New York Vintage Books p 553 ISBN 978 0 394 75984 5 a b Scarlet kisses of death for Oscar s tomb the Guardian 28 October 2000 Retrieved 7 April 2022 a b Oscar Wilde s lipstick covered Paris tomb to be protected The Guardian 27 November 2011 Peralta Eyder 28 November 2011 A Kiss No More Oscar Wilde s Tomb Will Be Protected From Smooches NPR Retrieved 7 April 2022 Oscar Wilde s restored tomb is unveiled in Paris BBC Online Retrieved 2 May 2013 Pearce Gary 6 December 2011 Important we should still hear the call of the Wilde ABC News Retrieved 18 June 2019 JLF 2016 Fry on Wilde retrieved 7 April 2022 Paris John Tagliabue 25 December 2011 Oscar Wilde s adored tomb sealed from loving kisses The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 7 April 2022 JLF 2016 Fry on Wilde retrieved 7 April 2022 Pennington 1987 p 30 Pennington 1987 p 35 Study for the Tomb of Oscar Wilde The New Art Gallery Walsall Retrieved 5 May 2013 Sources edit Haskell Epstein 1931 The Sculptor Speaks London William Heinemann Pennington Michael 1987 An Angel for a Martyr Jacob Epstein s tomb for Oscar Wilde Whitenights Press ISBN 978 0704901131 External links edit nbsp Media related to Grave of Oscar Wilde and Robert Baldwin Ross at Wikimedia Commons Pencil study for the tomb at The New Art Gallery Walsall Wilde s Tomb at The Poetry Foundation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oscar Wilde 27s tomb amp oldid 1221377466, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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