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Wilde v Whistler / Being an Acrimonious Correspondence on Art Between Oscar Wilde and James A McNeill Whistler cover

Wilde v Whistler / Being an Acrimonious Correspondence on Art Between Oscar Wilde and James A McNeill Whistler

Chapter 9: JUST INDIGNATION
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About This Book

The pamphlet collects a sharp, public exchange of letters, essays, and newspaper pieces in which two prominent art figures trade praise, parody, and rebuke while arguing about the nature and purpose of art. Through polemical responses to lectures and reviews, they dispute whether beauty should be cultivated or shunned, whether painters alone may judge painting, and whether art must relate to social surroundings or stay autonomous. The pieces alternate wittily between satire and earnest aesthetic reflection, showcasing paradox, theatrical insult, and close readings of artistic practice, and offering an episodic portrait of late Victorian debates over criticism, taste, and the artist's role.

JUST INDIGNATION

OSCAR—How dare you! What means the disguise?

Restore those things to Nathan’s, and never again let me find you masquerading the streets of my Chelsea in the combined costumes of Kossuth and Mr Mantalini!

J. A. McN. WHISTLER.

Upon seeing the Poet, in Polish cap and green overcoat, befrogged, and wonderfully befurred.


Transcriber’s Notes:

Printer’s, punctuation, and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.

Variable punctuation has been preserved (e.g. Mr/Mr.), where there is no predominant instance.