Article

The Pierrot of the Minute

WILLIAM THEODORE PETERS
As Ernest Dowson’s ‘The Pierrot of the Minute’

William Theodore Peters—remember him?

He is the American poet and actor with recent claims on this blog to be the ultimate decadent of the 1890s.

Peters’s decadent persona is supported by a photograph featured in that article which was thought to be the only one of him known to exist. However, I concluded by hinting at the existence of two other images of Peters that have recently come to my attention.

The first of these is the photograph below of Peters in Pierrot costume.

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Article

Profile of Constance

MRS. OSCAR WILDE AT HOME
And a rare photograph of her in profile

Below is an illustrated interview with Constance Wilde that appeared in the journal To-day on Saturday, November 24, 1894. In it she talks about art, home decoration, handicrafts, and shows off her autograph book.

The article features a rare photograph of Constance taken in profile which does not appear to have been published elsewhere.

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Article

In The Gold Room

Gustav Klimt’s ‘Woman in Gold’ — centerpiece of The Neue Galerie, New York.

THE GOLD ROOMS OF WILDE AND KLIMT

—And the Vienna Inheritance of an Oscar Wilde Poem—

‘In the Gold Room’ is a poem that has attracted limited attention since it first appeared in Oscar Wilde’s self-published debut volume of Poems (1881).

Since then the poem has dimmed in the memory of even the seasoned scholar—and a visit to a museum of Germanic art hardly seemed likely to bring it back into the light.

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Article

In Bohemia: A Masque

AN ALLEGORICAL PLEA TO OSCAR WILDE

In Bohemia: A Masque
by Christian Gauss, the future Dean of Princeton University.

The fifth and final article of my Three Times Tried series featured the third appearance in 1899 of a sonnet by Oscar Wilde. On this occasion he presented it to a young man named Christian Frederick Gauss, a recent graduate of the University of Michigan, who would eventually become Professor of Modern Languages at Princeton.

We saw how Gauss had incorporated his meetings with Wilde into a striking work titled In Bohemia: A Masque, first published in the literary monthly East and West in June 1900.

As the previous article only featured selections of the poem, it is worth presenting it in full here separately, for the record.

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Article

Poser?

CARTOON IN “JUDY”
by an unknown artist

Judy; or the London Serio-Comic Journal was a Victorian era journal that ran from May 1, 1867 until its final issue on October 23, 1907.

It was a lesser known rival to the older, more satirical, and more familiar magazine Punch, or The London Charivari — with both magazines clearly taking their names from the traditional British seaside puppets Punch and Judy.

The above cartoon, from the December 1, 1886 issue, features the great man by the fireside having returned to “little wifey” and her homely setting from a congenial gathering of artists.

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Article

William Theodore Peters

THE ULTIMATE 1890s DECADENT?
William Theodore Peters (1862–1905)

The stereotype of 1890s decadence was perhaps best expressed in the introduction to The Letters of Ernest Dowson (1967) which described the movement thus:

… idle, penurious, drunken, promiscuous, living with its head in a cloud of artistic ambition but doing little towards its achievement, tempted towards drugs and perversion, often addicted to them, producing exquisitely fashioned small works, but doomed, after material failure, to an early death.1

The editors responsible for that definition did concede it was a little too familiar, perhaps being perpetuated by survivors of the period, such as Arthur Symons and Frank Harris, who were eager to convince others of their own wicked youth.

But whatever the prescription may be, there is no denying that the American poet William Theodore Peters had all the symptoms, and more besides, suggesting that he might be the ultimate 1890s decadent.

Consider the case history of his credentials:

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Article · News

Oscar Brought To Life

The AI Oscar Wilde
From the Mystery Scoop Channel

The series History Brought to Life on You Tube’s Mystery Scoop channel uses the power of AI technology to turn a single still image into stunning animations for an immersive glimpse into history—it is a labor of love that demands immense effort, creativity, and talent to bring each figure to life.

I have been watching the impressive series of historical characters and finally Oscar Wilde has arrived in Volume 11.

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Announcement · Article

Anselm Kiefer

Winterlandschaft | Anselm Kiefer, 1970
Watercolor, gouache, and graphite on paper 17 x 14 1/8 in.

The Ashmolean Museum
ANSELM KIEFER: EARLY WORKS
February 14—June 15, 2025

Next week the University of Oxford’s Ashmolean Museum1 opens a major exhibition of the German visionary Anselm Kiefer, which it describes as “a landmark survey of the artist’s work produced between 1969-1982.”

So why should this interest Wildeans?

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Article

Three Times Tried—III

Ideal Love

Fifth and final article in series of adapted from a larger text by the present author that appeared in the July 2022 (No. 61) edition of the ‘The Wildean’, the journal of the Oscar Wilde Society.

In this fifth and final article of the seri it’s a bit like yeah the report was no family plans they said is a top 10 best and we’ve only looked at the call center ones he said that so I didn’t I looked at they can do but that’s after they’ve dealt with it don’t want we wanna be alerted first we can go around then we Whether ambulance is needed but this guy say no it sounds like an I’m busy is needed and when an ambulance comes in they can’t find don’t worry she’s down about shit all that crap we got we wanna be we won’t be that far away neither or Dave won’t right well Mel but anywayes we shall look at the third appearance of Wilde’s sonnet in 1899.

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Article

About Face

The Howard Coster photographs of Alfred Douglas
At the National Portrait Gallery, London.

Speaking of Alfred Douglas, as we were in the latest article about Three Times Tried, he came onto my radar recently during the festive period.

You may recall a minor kerfuffle last year about various errors in a label to an Oscar Wilde photograph at the National Portrait Gallery in London, that I highlighted and which were subsequently corrected. So perhaps to atone for that censure, I decided to visit the gallery’s online shop for gift-giving ideas.

I alighted upon four interesting and lesser-known images of the noble Lord—part of a collection of photographs taken in the 1940s by the renowned celebrity photographer Howard Coster.1

There was a problem, however.

It’s pedantic, I know, but didn’t somebody once say: we should treat all the trivial things of life seriously.

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