PARIS.- The Petit Palais is presenting the first major exhibition in France devoted to the famous writer Oscar Wilde (Dublin 1854 Paris 1900). Although Wilde died in the French capital, the centenary of his death was not celebrated here; London, on the contrary, honoured him with two large-scale exhibitions in 2000, one mainly literary and biographical at the British Library, and the other at the Barbican Centre, focusing on his connections with the artists of his time.
For this landmark event the Petit Palais retraces the life and work of this ardent francophile and speaker of perfect French through more than 200 remarkable exhibits, some never shown before: manuscripts, photographs, drawings, caricatures and personal effects; as well as paintings borrowed not only from Ireland and England, but also from the United States, Canada and Italy, from French institutions including the Musée dOrsay and the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, and from various private collections.
It was only natural that Paris should ultimately host an exhibition like this one, given Wildes creative links with a host of leading figures on the artistic and intellectual scenes in late 19th-century Paris. He made frequent stays in the city between 1883 and 1894 and counted among his writer friends André Gide, Pierre Louÿs, Stéphane Mallarmé, Paul Verlaine and even met Victor Hugo. He wrote his play Salomé originally in French, with Sarah Bernhardt in mind for the title role. Wilde would die, wretchedly poor, in Paris in 1900, after his conviction for homosexuality in London five years before; his tomb in Père Lachaise cemetery is topped with a sculpture by Jacob Epstein. The biographical element of the exhibition is uniquely innovative in bringing together a number of painted portraits for the first time, in particular the one by Harper Pennington (William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, UCLA, Los Angeles). A further world premiere is the first-ever group showing of 13 of the original oversize photo-portraits taken by Napoleon Sarony during Wildes tour of America in 1882.
These portraits are complemented by others, both famous and unexpected: Wilde in back view, for example, in the left foreground of Toulouse-Lautrecs La Danse mauresque (Musée dOrsay), painted as part of the set at the Baraque de la Goulue cabaret.
Portraits of Wildes family and friends, among them his wife Constance and Lord Alfred Douglas, offer an insight into his personal life, together with various memorabilia and drawings, watercolours, landscapes and portraits by Wilde himself.
Needless to say the exhibition also includes his most significant manuscripts, copies of books inscribed to French writers and samples of his correspondence. Special attention has been given to Salomé, published in French in 1893, with its celebrated illustrations by Aubrey Beardsley and the Petit Palais is showing two of the original artworks.
In addition to showcases displaying the books and manuscripts, the exhibition has been visually enhanced by a selection of Pre-Raphaelite pictures by Watts, Millais, Hunt, Crane, Tissot, Stanhope and others shown at the Grosvenor Gallery in London in 1877 and 1879 and extensively written about by Wilde in his role as art critic. At different points visitors also are offered excerpts from historic films, from interviews with Wildes grandson Merlin Holland and Robert Badinter, author of the play C. 3. 3. an account of Wildes trial and imprisonment and from recordings of Wildes works read by English actor Rupert Everett. A further feature is a mobile phone application serving as a guide and digital catalogue. The application divides the exhibition itinerary into 25 segments, with audio commentary by the two curators and high-definition images. The digital catalogue helps the visitor to discover the writer and his influence from different angles: via a timeline, a map of the world and an Oscar Wilde primer. It also includes the filmed interviews.