Not currently on display at the V&A

Othello and Iago

Figure Group
ca.1858 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Stars of the 19th century were often celebrated in paintings, prints and drawings, and in ceramic figurines. From the late 1830s until the early 1900s several Staffordshire factories specialised in moulded earthenware portrait figurines which were decorated by hand and sold cheaply. This represents Othello and Iago in Shakespeare's play Othello.

The source for this figurine was an engraving of a watercolour by S.A. Hart RA which appeared in The National Magazine in 1858, the year Othello was performed at London's Lyceum Theatre by the African American performer Ira Aldridge (1807?-1867) on the 29th and 31st July. Othello was often revived throughout the 19th century with the greatest actors playing Othello or Iago, including John Philip Kemble, Edmund Kean, William Charles Macready, Samuel Phelps and Charles Kean. Curiously the most controversial portrayal of Othello was that by Aldridge who first played it at Covent Garden Theatre in 1833, replacing Edmund Kean in the role after Kean's death. Aldridge's Othello at the Lyceum in 1858 was possibly the inspiration for Hart's watercolour, although Charles Dillon also played Othello at the Lyceum that year.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleOthello and Iago (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Moulded and glazed earthenware
Brief description
Othello and Iago, characters from Shakespeare's Othello, after an engraving of a watercolour by S.A. Hart RA, which appeared in The National Magazine 1858. Glazed earthenware, Staffordshire, ca.1858
Physical description
A figurine of Othello and Iago from Shakeapeare's Othello. Othello, the figure on the left, is dressed in a Moorish costume including a kaftan, long robe, sash, and turban. Iago, on the right, is dressed in typical 16th century European costume including breeches, doublet, sash, cape, and hat. The figures are only painted on the front.
Dimensions
  • Height: 30.2cm
  • Maximum width width: 19.5cm
  • Of base width: 16.5cm
  • Of base height: 3.75cm
  • Of base depth: 8.0cm
Credit line
Accepted by HM Government in lieu of Inheritance Tax and allocated to the Victoria and Albert Museum, 1996
Production
Modelled after an engraving of a watercolour by S.A. Hart RA which appeared in The National Magazine in 1858.
Subjects depicted
Literary referenceOthello
Summary
Stars of the 19th century were often celebrated in paintings, prints and drawings, and in ceramic figurines. From the late 1830s until the early 1900s several Staffordshire factories specialised in moulded earthenware portrait figurines which were decorated by hand and sold cheaply. This represents Othello and Iago in Shakespeare's play Othello.

The source for this figurine was an engraving of a watercolour by S.A. Hart RA which appeared in The National Magazine in 1858, the year Othello was performed at London's Lyceum Theatre by the African American performer Ira Aldridge (1807?-1867) on the 29th and 31st July. Othello was often revived throughout the 19th century with the greatest actors playing Othello or Iago, including John Philip Kemble, Edmund Kean, William Charles Macready, Samuel Phelps and Charles Kean. Curiously the most controversial portrayal of Othello was that by Aldridge who first played it at Covent Garden Theatre in 1833, replacing Edmund Kean in the role after Kean's death. Aldridge's Othello at the Lyceum in 1858 was possibly the inspiration for Hart's watercolour, although Charles Dillon also played Othello at the Lyceum that year.
Bibliographic references
  • Staffordshire Portrait Figures of the Victoria Era by P.D. Gordon Pugh, p.426, fig.31.
  • Victorian Staffordshire Figures 1835-1875 by A & N. Harding, Book One, p.293.
Collection
Accession number
S.979-1996

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Record createdJanuary 4, 2006
Record URL
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