"Off, off, you lendings–Come unbutton here" (Shakespeare, King Lear, Act 3, Scene 4)
In one of a series of engravings Boydell published to reproduce paintings displayed in the Shakespeare Gallery, King Lear has been driven out by his daughters and is buffeted by a storm on a heath. As the king displays his unsettled mind by tearing off his clothes, the Duke of Kent begs him to take shelter. Edgar, another outcast disguised as Tom O'Bedlam, sits at lower right near the Fool. Completing the group, the Duke of Gloucester raises a torch against the darkness. The American born painter West made his name in England painting neoclassical subjects admired by George III, together with heroic modern histories, but here uses a swirling baroque mode suited to a subject that contemporaries would have seen as echoing the madness that afflicted their own king from 1788.
Artwork Details
- Title: "Off, off, you lendings–Come unbutton here" (Shakespeare, King Lear, Act 3, Scene 4)
- Series/Portfolio: Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery
- Artist: William Sharp (British, London 1749–1824 London)
- Artist: After Benjamin West (American, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania 1738–1820 London)
- Publisher: John & Josiah Boydell (British, 1786–1804)
- Subject: William Shakespeare (British, Stratford-upon-Avon 1564–1616 Stratford-upon-Avon)
- Date: 1793
- Medium: Etching and engraving
- Dimensions: image: 17 3/8 x 23 5/16 in. (44.2 x 59.2 cm)
sheet: 19 1/4 x 24 7/16 in. (48.9 x 62.1 cm) - Classification: Prints
- Credit Line: Gift of Georgiana W. Sargent, in memory of John Osborne Sargent, 1924
- Object Number: 24.63.1869
- Curatorial Department: Drawings and Prints
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