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Studio: international art — 23.1901

DOI issue:
Nr. 101 (August 1901)
DOI article:
Sparrow, Walter Shaw: Some drawings by Patten Wilson
DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.19788#0221

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Patten Wilson

HEAD-PIECE BY PATTEN WILSON

(By permission oj Mr. Grant Richards)

made a serious attempt to illustrate a classic known did not turn his art into a sketching reporter of

to all readers. The "Swan" edition of Shake- stage traditions, traditions of "business," and of

speare being a school edition, Mr. Wilson, in his types of character. Many an artist has deemed

illustrations for " King John," had every tempta- that self-restraint quite unnecessary, as though a

tion to win an easy success by dealing with his great dramatist ought always to be represented

subject from the popular and theatrical point of behind the footlights, playing to the pit and

view. It says much for his self-restraint that he gallery. Shakespeare—who detested the stage—

" Alas ! 'tis true I have gone here and
there,

And made myself a motley to the view,
Gor'd my own thoughts, sold cheap

what is most dear,
Made old offences of affections new''—

Shakespeare, no doubt, asks for a
different treatment from artists.
He claims from them, not scenic
gestures and scenic airs, but a quiet
reader's poetic sympathy, like that
which reveals itself in Charles
Lamb's essay on the harm done
by stage representation to the
mind's free intercourse with Shake-
speare and his distinguished ex-
cellence.

Still, it is one thing to have a
good idea, and quite another thing
to realise it in art. Mr. Patten
Wilson, when illustrating " King
John," was certainly moved by an
excellent idea; and his effort not
to be theatrical was successful.
But—and this must be said—he
is uneasy in several drawings, as
in the one representing the Lady
Constance. Here, so it seems to
me, his power of originating images
and conceptions is fettered and
cramped by the size of the little
page which it has to illustrate. On
the other hand, the drawing of the
King is well conceived. In it there

ILLUSTRATION FOR "THE ANCIENT MARINER" BY PATTEN WILSON .g somethmg more than a note of

» THE HELMSMAN STEERED, THE SHIP MOVED ON » ;g ^ &

(By permission of Messrs. Longmans) " o J

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