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Another Shakespeare Portrait?
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to prolong and extend our intimacy with the author--to partake again, from another angle, of the joys we have experienced within this author's oeuvre, in the presence of a voice and mind we have come to love.
"We read, those of us who do": John Updike, New York Review of Books, Vol. XLVI, No. 2, 4 February 1999.

All the other "portaits" merely have a flimsy similarity with this image. The famous Chandos portrait looks to me like some merchant, not a poet.
I can't find the frontispiece portrait of Alexander Pope from the 1717 Works anywhere on line: it is highly idealised. Even the more conventional portraits of Pope give us no idea of the reality --

-- that he was a hunchbacked dwarf.
But poet portraits, especially of the frontispiece kind, were often idealised. Lofty brows, sensitive features, laurel wreaths and so on.
Occasionally you can compare the idealised poet,
[image error]
with the actual


My favourite picture of Shakespeare is the little drawing by Picasso, which used to be on the front cover of the "Cambridge Shakespeare" series,
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You have made a mindblowing observation about the clothes of a poet, the expression and such. Thaks...I'm in a hurry back later...the Picasso is awesome...

I love it. That is how I'm going to start describing myself.

Jonson goes on to lament that it was impossible for Droeshout to portray Shakespeare's wit equally well - at a time when the word "wit" had a much broader meaning than today: "...the Print would then surpasse/ All, that was ever writ in brasse./ But, since he cannot, Reader, looke/ Not on his Picture, but his Booke."
Excerpt from "A face by any other name," Editorial in the print edition of The Globe and Mail, March 14, 2009


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait...
http://www.william-shakespeare.info/w...
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/10/wor...
http://www.william-shakespeare.info/w...
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/10/wor...

http://mrshakespeare.typepad.com/mrsh...
(This blog is really well-informed and interesting.)
For a little on the possible background to the Droeshout engraving, see
http://www.britishmuseum.org/explore/...
But errors abound. The brit. mus. article calls it a frontispiece, which it is not. The wikipedia article you quote puts it "on the cover of the first folio", where it is not. It is actually centred on the title page -- very unusual. The poem William mentions (more precisely: the poem the Editorial of The Globe and Mail mentions) is alongside it, on the left-hand page, signed B.I. But it does not first praise the engraver, and then "go on" to lament something else, it is all part of a single statement ....
.... but really it is best if Jonson speaks for himself:
This Figure, that thou here seest put,
It was for gentle Shakespeare cut;
Wherein the Graver had a strife
With Nature, to out-doo the life:
O, could he but have drawn his wit
As well in brasse, as he hath hit
His face; the Print would then surpass
All, that was ever writ in brass.
But, since he cannot, Reader, look
Not on his Picture, but his Book.
It's a bit of an advertiser's blurb is it not? "You've seen the picture, now read the book!"
You might note that I posted those links around 4 a.m. when I couldn't sleep. I had it in my mind to see if there were any fabulous books on the subject of the many paintings considered to be Shakespeare. Unfortunately...I was too awake and too tired to get anywhere.
There must be big business in the Shakespeare portrait business and I'm thinking of making one myself! Ha!
Really though, I'd love to read a great book on the ? dozens of paintings of W.S.
There must be big business in the Shakespeare portrait business and I'm thinking of making one myself! Ha!
Really though, I'd love to read a great book on the ? dozens of paintings of W.S.

Candy, a great book (both in size and excellence) is Schoenbaum's "Shakespeare's Lives". Well worth a library reservation. There is a lot on Shakespeare portraits, the great forging business of Shakespeariana (often of portraits), and the wacko stuff of Delia Bacon, Mr Looney etc.
Not worth buying just for the section on the portraits, but as I say, well worth a library visit.

To those of us who care, it is all very exciting. Read the article here.
http://www.utac.utoronto.ca/content/v...
http://www.ago.net/shakespeare
http://www.amazon.ca/Shakespeares-Fac...
Another painting has surfaced thought to be of Shakespeare painted during his lifetime...in U.K.
http://www.thestar.com/news/world/art...
http://thepeterboroughexaminer.com/Ar...
I really got into the story and analysis of the "Sanders Portrait" and have seen the painting a couple of times.
What do you think? Are these really our fellow?