In this year marking the 400th anniversary of
Shakespeare’s death, I have posted about a number of books about the playwright
and his plays and poetry. Today I
thought I’d feature the Shakespeare book from Schatje’s Shelves which I probably
browse most often: Shakespeare in Art by Jane Martineau et al.
Here’s a summary of the book from the flyleaf:
“Shakespeare is one of the most influential writers of all
time, but it was the rediscovery of his work in the eighteenth century that was
a key factor in launching the Romantic movement. At the height of the Shakespeare craze of the
early nineteenth century a handful of plays--Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, King Lear and Romeo and
Juliet--created the mindset of a generation, affecting every artist,
writer, composer and politician in Europe. Shakespeare
in Art tells the remarkable story of how one of many Elizabethan
dramatists, for centuries virtually unknown outside England, became a truly
European author, inspiring German nationalist thinkers, French dramatists,
Italian opera composers, Russian novelists and painters everywhere. Everyone
agreed that the plays were untranslatable and yet everyone tried to translate
them.
“Shakespeare in Art
looks especially at the huge variety of painters who made Shakespeare's
extremes of passion, his evocations of nature, his spirit world and his
eternally familiar characters the subjects of their own work. Also explored is
the influence of Shakespeare on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literature, theatre,
music and printmaking.”
The book includes 11 in-depth essays by ten different contributors.
One of my favourite is “Shakespeare and Music” by John Warrack (pp. 40 – 47). But the highlight of the book is 88 full-page,
colour reproductions of artworks. Each
plate is accompanied by particulars about the plate and an explanatory text. 21 of Shakespeare’s plays are
represented.
This is a book to treasure and savour.
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