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Shakespeare Gallery
3D visualization of an exhibition in Shakespeare, Salzburg.
published: 05 Sep 2015
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Shakespeare - The Greatest Playwright in History Documentary
For early access to our videos, discounted merch and many other exclusive perks please support us as a Patron or Member...
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Hello guys! If you like our work please subscribe to our second channel The History Chronicles https://www.youtube.com/c/TheHistoryChronicles
The script for this video has been checked with Plagiarism software and scored 1% on Grammarly. In academia, a score of below 15% is considered good or acceptable.
All footage, images and music used in People Profiles Documentaries are sourced from free media websites or are purch...
published: 11 Jun 2023
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Rosie Dias: 'Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery and its Public'
Rosie Dias (Warwick)
'Viewers, Patrons, Readers, Consumers? Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery and its Public'
Romantic Illustration Network Symposium
'The Literary Galleries: Entrepreneurship and Public Art’
Tate Britain
Friday 27th February 2015
To listen to the full talk, see https://vimeo.com/roehamptonmediaservices/videos/sort:date.
published: 27 Mar 2015
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Shakespeare and the Manchester Art Gallery
Part of the New Manchester Walks' guided tour of 'William Shakespeare's Manchester'.
published: 23 Apr 2018
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Janine Barchas on reconstructing What Jane Saw Shakespeare Gallery
Author and academician Janine Barchas on Jane Austen and William Shakespeare, "What Jane Saw" and the "Will & Jane" exhibit at the Folger Shakespeare Library, at the Winter 2016 JASNA-SW meeting
published: 09 Jan 2017
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Boydell Shakespeare Gallery
Videopedia - The Wikipedia for illiterates
Want to support free knowledge? Support us on:
https://www.patreon.com/Videopedia
We provide a free service to help illiterate and visually impaired people to understand the world. Therefore we spend every day creating audio files and making videos to share knowledge arround our planet.
All our videos are based on Wikipedia articles the largest datebase of mankind.
Note that all text(audio/video) is licensed under CC-BY-SA, and all images are also creative commons (various licenses).
published: 22 Jul 2019
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Is Shakespeare Portrait Real?
There is new evidence that an unidentified portrait from a private collection may actually portray William Shakespeare. Richard Roth reports.
published: 09 Mar 2009
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The Shakespeare Gallery - Tom Leech and Patricia Musick
Historic Santa Fe Foundation presents the exhibition "Something Wicked This Way Comes," a collaborative show from Tom Leech, a Santa Fe papermaker and marbler, and Patricia Musick, an accomplished Colorado calligrapher and artist, inspired by some of Shakespeare's most famous lines. The exhibition was on display at El Zaguán during the month of May, 2020. Video by Kyle Maier with original music by Gregory Webb.
published: 30 Sep 2020
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Dudley Museum & Art Gallery Virtual Tour: Percy Shakespeare Gallery
Gallery of work from Dudley-born artist Percy Shakespeare, 1906 - 1943.
"A very talented artist, Percy Shakespeare was one of Dudley's most famous artistic sons. In his short life, he overcame many disadvantages to carve out a career as a painter. By a cruel twist of fate his life was cut tragically short in 1943, at only 37 years of age. He had already become a regular exhibitor at the Royal Academy, and had had a picture accepted by the Paris Salon. As a painter, he was just getting into his stride.
One of eight children, he was born in 1906 in the slums of Kate's Hill to a very poor family. He could have expected little in the way of education, but upon reaching school leaving age in 1920, a chance meeting with the Dudley Art Schoool Principle, Ivo Shaw, gave him the chance to break ...
published: 09 Nov 2021
4:52
Shakespeare Gallery
3D visualization of an exhibition in Shakespeare, Salzburg.
3D visualization of an exhibition in Shakespeare, Salzburg.
https://wn.com/Shakespeare_Gallery
3D visualization of an exhibition in Shakespeare, Salzburg.
- published: 05 Sep 2015
- views: 23
1:12:17
Shakespeare - The Greatest Playwright in History Documentary
For early access to our videos, discounted merch and many other exclusive perks please support us as a Patron or Member...
Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/thepe...
For early access to our videos, discounted merch and many other exclusive perks please support us as a Patron or Member...
Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/thepeopleprofiles
Buy me a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/peopleprofiles
YouTube Membership: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCD6TPU-PvTMvqgzC_AM7_uA/join
or follow us on Twitter! https://twitter.com/tpprofiles
Hello guys! If you like our work please subscribe to our second channel The History Chronicles https://www.youtube.com/c/TheHistoryChronicles
The script for this video has been checked with Plagiarism software and scored 1% on Grammarly. In academia, a score of below 15% is considered good or acceptable.
All footage, images and music used in People Profiles Documentaries are sourced from free media websites or are purchased with commercial rights from online media archives.
#Biography #History #Documentary
https://wn.com/Shakespeare_The_Greatest_Playwright_In_History_Documentary
For early access to our videos, discounted merch and many other exclusive perks please support us as a Patron or Member...
Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/thepeopleprofiles
Buy me a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/peopleprofiles
YouTube Membership: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCD6TPU-PvTMvqgzC_AM7_uA/join
or follow us on Twitter! https://twitter.com/tpprofiles
Hello guys! If you like our work please subscribe to our second channel The History Chronicles https://www.youtube.com/c/TheHistoryChronicles
The script for this video has been checked with Plagiarism software and scored 1% on Grammarly. In academia, a score of below 15% is considered good or acceptable.
All footage, images and music used in People Profiles Documentaries are sourced from free media websites or are purchased with commercial rights from online media archives.
#Biography #History #Documentary
- published: 11 Jun 2023
- views: 396542
6:23
Rosie Dias: 'Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery and its Public'
Rosie Dias (Warwick)
'Viewers, Patrons, Readers, Consumers? Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery and its Public'
Romantic Illustration Network Symposium
'The Litera...
Rosie Dias (Warwick)
'Viewers, Patrons, Readers, Consumers? Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery and its Public'
Romantic Illustration Network Symposium
'The Literary Galleries: Entrepreneurship and Public Art’
Tate Britain
Friday 27th February 2015
To listen to the full talk, see https://vimeo.com/roehamptonmediaservices/videos/sort:date.
https://wn.com/Rosie_Dias_'Boydell's_Shakespeare_Gallery_And_Its_Public'
Rosie Dias (Warwick)
'Viewers, Patrons, Readers, Consumers? Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery and its Public'
Romantic Illustration Network Symposium
'The Literary Galleries: Entrepreneurship and Public Art’
Tate Britain
Friday 27th February 2015
To listen to the full talk, see https://vimeo.com/roehamptonmediaservices/videos/sort:date.
- published: 27 Mar 2015
- views: 104
2:38
Shakespeare and the Manchester Art Gallery
Part of the New Manchester Walks' guided tour of 'William Shakespeare's Manchester'.
Part of the New Manchester Walks' guided tour of 'William Shakespeare's Manchester'.
https://wn.com/Shakespeare_And_The_Manchester_Art_Gallery
Part of the New Manchester Walks' guided tour of 'William Shakespeare's Manchester'.
- published: 23 Apr 2018
- views: 39
2:42
Janine Barchas on reconstructing What Jane Saw Shakespeare Gallery
Author and academician Janine Barchas on Jane Austen and William Shakespeare, "What Jane Saw" and the "Will & Jane" exhibit at the Folger Shakespeare Library, a...
Author and academician Janine Barchas on Jane Austen and William Shakespeare, "What Jane Saw" and the "Will & Jane" exhibit at the Folger Shakespeare Library, at the Winter 2016 JASNA-SW meeting
https://wn.com/Janine_Barchas_On_Reconstructing_What_Jane_Saw_Shakespeare_Gallery
Author and academician Janine Barchas on Jane Austen and William Shakespeare, "What Jane Saw" and the "Will & Jane" exhibit at the Folger Shakespeare Library, at the Winter 2016 JASNA-SW meeting
- published: 09 Jan 2017
- views: 27
45:07
Boydell Shakespeare Gallery
Videopedia - The Wikipedia for illiterates
Want to support free knowledge? Support us on:
https://www.patreon.com/Videopedia
We provide a free service to hel...
Videopedia - The Wikipedia for illiterates
Want to support free knowledge? Support us on:
https://www.patreon.com/Videopedia
We provide a free service to help illiterate and visually impaired people to understand the world. Therefore we spend every day creating audio files and making videos to share knowledge arround our planet.
All our videos are based on Wikipedia articles the largest datebase of mankind.
Note that all text(audio/video) is licensed under CC-BY-SA, and all images are also creative commons (various licenses).
https://wn.com/Boydell_Shakespeare_Gallery
Videopedia - The Wikipedia for illiterates
Want to support free knowledge? Support us on:
https://www.patreon.com/Videopedia
We provide a free service to help illiterate and visually impaired people to understand the world. Therefore we spend every day creating audio files and making videos to share knowledge arround our planet.
All our videos are based on Wikipedia articles the largest datebase of mankind.
Note that all text(audio/video) is licensed under CC-BY-SA, and all images are also creative commons (various licenses).
- published: 22 Jul 2019
- views: 41
1:36
Is Shakespeare Portrait Real?
There is new evidence that an unidentified portrait from a private collection may actually portray William Shakespeare. Richard Roth reports.
There is new evidence that an unidentified portrait from a private collection may actually portray William Shakespeare. Richard Roth reports.
https://wn.com/Is_Shakespeare_Portrait_Real
There is new evidence that an unidentified portrait from a private collection may actually portray William Shakespeare. Richard Roth reports.
- published: 09 Mar 2009
- views: 9023
5:05
The Shakespeare Gallery - Tom Leech and Patricia Musick
Historic Santa Fe Foundation presents the exhibition "Something Wicked This Way Comes," a collaborative show from Tom Leech, a Santa Fe papermaker and marbler,...
Historic Santa Fe Foundation presents the exhibition "Something Wicked This Way Comes," a collaborative show from Tom Leech, a Santa Fe papermaker and marbler, and Patricia Musick, an accomplished Colorado calligrapher and artist, inspired by some of Shakespeare's most famous lines. The exhibition was on display at El Zaguán during the month of May, 2020. Video by Kyle Maier with original music by Gregory Webb.
https://wn.com/The_Shakespeare_Gallery_Tom_Leech_And_Patricia_Musick
Historic Santa Fe Foundation presents the exhibition "Something Wicked This Way Comes," a collaborative show from Tom Leech, a Santa Fe papermaker and marbler, and Patricia Musick, an accomplished Colorado calligrapher and artist, inspired by some of Shakespeare's most famous lines. The exhibition was on display at El Zaguán during the month of May, 2020. Video by Kyle Maier with original music by Gregory Webb.
- published: 30 Sep 2020
- views: 105
2:17
Dudley Museum & Art Gallery Virtual Tour: Percy Shakespeare Gallery
Gallery of work from Dudley-born artist Percy Shakespeare, 1906 - 1943.
"A very talented artist, Percy Shakespeare was one of Dudley's most famous artistic so...
Gallery of work from Dudley-born artist Percy Shakespeare, 1906 - 1943.
"A very talented artist, Percy Shakespeare was one of Dudley's most famous artistic sons. In his short life, he overcame many disadvantages to carve out a career as a painter. By a cruel twist of fate his life was cut tragically short in 1943, at only 37 years of age. He had already become a regular exhibitor at the Royal Academy, and had had a picture accepted by the Paris Salon. As a painter, he was just getting into his stride.
One of eight children, he was born in 1906 in the slums of Kate's Hill to a very poor family. He could have expected little in the way of education, but upon reaching school leaving age in 1920, a chance meeting with the Dudley Art Schoool Principle, Ivo Shaw, gave him the chance to break out of his environment and train as an artist. Recognizing his precocious talent, Shaw took him into the school and waived the tuition fees. From the start, Shakespeare had a remarkable gift for figure drawing; he could see the lines in the human form, and put them on paper with rare and confident precision. And he was prepared to work hard.
With excellent tuition and the opportuning to draw from live models he honed his skills. Many drawings from those art school sessions survive as testimony to his industry. He began to paint portaraits, and discovered a real feeling for colour. When he had learned all that Shaw could teach him, the Dudley Education Committee arranged for Percy to go to Birmingham College of Art, where he qualified as an art teacher. There were strong family pressures upon him to take a job, but he was determined to become a serious artist. It was not easy. He had few influential contacts, but the Dudley Art Circle (now the Dudley Society of Artists), led by C.V. Mackenzie, was very supportive of his endeavours. Percy's works became a regular feature of the Circle's annual exhibitions. Commissions were not easy to find, and few of his paintings were sold, but Shakespeare kept on painting. His first Royal Academy success was 'A Mulatto', in 1933; a fine portrait of a young lady. Encouragingly, this was bought for Dudley Art Gallery by public subscription.
Through the 1930s Shakespeare embarked on a series of oil paintings depicting groups of people at leisure. These compositions were the result of intense work, with many preliminary drawings of the component figures; these drawings themselves are of considerable merit in their own right. He painted one or two of these compositions each year, and submitted them to the Royal Academy. Often they were accepted. They are remarkable in their colour and figure arrangements, and together they captured the sprit of the 1930s. Shakespeare subsisted on a few hours teaching a week. He had no studio, and often painted in his small bedroom in the family home on the Wren's Nest.
When the Second World War broke out, Shakespeare continued to paint with ever more determination. Even after he was called up for the Royal Navy, he continued to paint. He was doing special work in a naval shore establishment at Roedean School near Brighton, when he went walking alone on the cliffs, where he thought himself safe. He was killed by a stray German bomb.
Percy Shakespeare left behind many figure drawings, oil portraits, and his 'Thirties at Leisure' compositions. Poignantly, his best works were still unsold. He should have had even more painting years ahead of him. He had already achieved much, but what else might he have gone on to accomplish had his life not been cut so short?"
Adapted from the gallery placard, originally by Robin Shaw.
See the full Percy Shakespeare collection at Art UK, the free catalogue of publicly-owned artwork in Britain:
https://artuk.org/discover/artists/shakespeare-percy-19061943
Part of a series of videos recorded in late 2016 in an attempt to 'preserve' Dudley's museum online, shortly before its closure.
https://wn.com/Dudley_Museum_Art_Gallery_Virtual_Tour_Percy_Shakespeare_Gallery
Gallery of work from Dudley-born artist Percy Shakespeare, 1906 - 1943.
"A very talented artist, Percy Shakespeare was one of Dudley's most famous artistic sons. In his short life, he overcame many disadvantages to carve out a career as a painter. By a cruel twist of fate his life was cut tragically short in 1943, at only 37 years of age. He had already become a regular exhibitor at the Royal Academy, and had had a picture accepted by the Paris Salon. As a painter, he was just getting into his stride.
One of eight children, he was born in 1906 in the slums of Kate's Hill to a very poor family. He could have expected little in the way of education, but upon reaching school leaving age in 1920, a chance meeting with the Dudley Art Schoool Principle, Ivo Shaw, gave him the chance to break out of his environment and train as an artist. Recognizing his precocious talent, Shaw took him into the school and waived the tuition fees. From the start, Shakespeare had a remarkable gift for figure drawing; he could see the lines in the human form, and put them on paper with rare and confident precision. And he was prepared to work hard.
With excellent tuition and the opportuning to draw from live models he honed his skills. Many drawings from those art school sessions survive as testimony to his industry. He began to paint portaraits, and discovered a real feeling for colour. When he had learned all that Shaw could teach him, the Dudley Education Committee arranged for Percy to go to Birmingham College of Art, where he qualified as an art teacher. There were strong family pressures upon him to take a job, but he was determined to become a serious artist. It was not easy. He had few influential contacts, but the Dudley Art Circle (now the Dudley Society of Artists), led by C.V. Mackenzie, was very supportive of his endeavours. Percy's works became a regular feature of the Circle's annual exhibitions. Commissions were not easy to find, and few of his paintings were sold, but Shakespeare kept on painting. His first Royal Academy success was 'A Mulatto', in 1933; a fine portrait of a young lady. Encouragingly, this was bought for Dudley Art Gallery by public subscription.
Through the 1930s Shakespeare embarked on a series of oil paintings depicting groups of people at leisure. These compositions were the result of intense work, with many preliminary drawings of the component figures; these drawings themselves are of considerable merit in their own right. He painted one or two of these compositions each year, and submitted them to the Royal Academy. Often they were accepted. They are remarkable in their colour and figure arrangements, and together they captured the sprit of the 1930s. Shakespeare subsisted on a few hours teaching a week. He had no studio, and often painted in his small bedroom in the family home on the Wren's Nest.
When the Second World War broke out, Shakespeare continued to paint with ever more determination. Even after he was called up for the Royal Navy, he continued to paint. He was doing special work in a naval shore establishment at Roedean School near Brighton, when he went walking alone on the cliffs, where he thought himself safe. He was killed by a stray German bomb.
Percy Shakespeare left behind many figure drawings, oil portraits, and his 'Thirties at Leisure' compositions. Poignantly, his best works were still unsold. He should have had even more painting years ahead of him. He had already achieved much, but what else might he have gone on to accomplish had his life not been cut so short?"
Adapted from the gallery placard, originally by Robin Shaw.
See the full Percy Shakespeare collection at Art UK, the free catalogue of publicly-owned artwork in Britain:
https://artuk.org/discover/artists/shakespeare-percy-19061943
Part of a series of videos recorded in late 2016 in an attempt to 'preserve' Dudley's museum online, shortly before its closure.
- published: 09 Nov 2021
- views: 39