Sculptures of a headless and limbless Dionysus, this man’s estranged wife, and a reclining sculpture of him in a red and green jacket feature in a three-sculpture memorial by Danny Osborne. Police presence prevented a sculptor from working on a piece named for this man due to his choice to include testicles. This man’s grinning face and a hand holding a cigarette emerge from a bench-like sarcophagus in a Maggi Hambling sculpture titled for “A Conversation with” him. A glass barrier was installed in front of a sculpture of this man in the Père Lachaise (“pair lah-SHEZ”) Cemetery to prevent people from leaving lipstick kisses on it. This writer’s tomb, which includes boxy stone slabs abutting a sphinxlike creature, was sculpted by Jacob Epstein. For 10 points, name this writer whose epitaph is adorned with lines from his poem “The Ballad of Reading Gaol ■END■
ANSWER: Oscar Wilde [or Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde; accept Oscar Wilde’s tomb; accept A Conversation with Oscar Wilde]
<Painting & Sculpture>
= Average correct buzz position