News
The illustrations of Aubrey Beardsley, who succumbed to consumption ... oeuvre — currently represented in a retrospective at the Tate Britain — which revels from beginning to end in death ...
A new show at Tate Britain delves into the short-lived but prolific career of the illustrator, who shocked Victorian society to its core with his salacious ink drawings Despite dying from tuberculosis ...
But Aubrey Beardsley’s decadent ... the artist’s works will go on show at Tate Britain in London next week. His drawings proved divisive even as recently as the Sixties, inspiring the album ...
International cultural life has been devastated by COVID-19, but Tate Britain’s pandemic-truncated exhibition on the decadent artist Aubrey Beardsley, which the museum boasts is the largest collection ...
Aubrey Beardsley (1872-98), the go-to illustrator of “naughty nineties” England, is only known to have painted two pictures during his brief yet prolific career, and Tate Britain is fortunate ...
Tate Britain’s Aubrey Beardsley show reveals the elegant and erotic drawings of the fin-de-siècle British artist – but his conversion to Catholicism remains unexplored, writes Laura Gascoigne ...
Detail from an illustration for Oscar Wilde's Salome, The Peacock Skirt (1893) by Aubrey Beardsley ... More in exhibition at Tate Britain ...
Aubrey Beardsley was the first editor of The Yellow Book. Image courtesy Tate. A virile young Spartan brandishing a comically oversized penis greets an elderly Athenian with a withered member.
With cultural activities on pause during the COVID-19 crisis, Tate has announced that it is bringing some of its biggest blockbuster 2020 exhibitions to your home. The London-based modern art ...
A new show at Tate Britain delves into the short-lived but prolific career of the illustrator, who shocked Victorian society to its core with his salacious ink drawings Despite dying from tuberculosis ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results