• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: VICTORIAN ART HISTORY: RAP 2 UNWRAPPED
  • Contributor: Kestner, Joseph A.
  • imprint: Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2001
  • Published in: Victorian Literature and Culture
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1017/s1060150301291098
  • ISSN: 1060-1503; 1470-1553
  • Keywords: Literature and Literary Theory ; Cultural Studies
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <jats:p>A<jats:sc>T THE END OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY</jats:sc>, Victorian painting experienced at least one mass media event, so far as circulation is concerned — the appearance of Frederic Leighton’s <jats:italic>The Bath of Psyche</jats:italic> (1890) on the wall of the drug kingpin in Paul Thomas Anderson’s notorious film <jats:italic>Boogie Nights</jats:italic> of 1997. As a ferocious deal is going awry, over the desperate dealers looms one of the masterpieces of the Victorian High Renaissance, a commentary through the cool classicism of the late Victorians about the corresponding <jats:italic>fin-de-siècle</jats:italic> of the lately finished century. It is a stunning moment — perhaps recognized only by historians of British art — but there it is nonetheless. One is to presume that the dealer has acquired the original from the Tate Gallery, since he would never own a copy, let alone a poster! Busboy superstud Mark Wahlberg has brief, violent contact with a masterpiece.</jats:p>