Not currently on display at the V&A

Keane in Richard 3rd

Drawing
ca.1830 (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Hand cut stencil on cream, ribbed paper, with handwritten caption reading 'Keane in Richard 3rd', probably the English actor, Edmund Kean (1787 – 1833), ca.1830

The stencil shows a head and shoulders outline of Kean as he appeared in the role of Richard III, which appears to have been taken from the 1814 portrait of Kean, by John James Halls, (ca.1797-1854). Kean first played Richard III at the Drury Lane Theatre on 12 February 1814. It became one of his most admired roles, along with Macbeth and Iago. Kean's natural passion and fiery spirit suited a melodramatic style of acting, but he nevertheless made his name playing in Shakespeare. He was said to be at his best in death scenes, and scenes that required intensity of feeling or violent transitions from one mood to another, prompting the poet Coleridge to note that watching Kean act was like 'reading Shakespeare by flashes of lightning'.



Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleKeane in Richard 3rd (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Ink on paper, printed, drawn.
Brief description
Hand cut stencil on cream, ribbed paper, with handwritten caption reading 'Keane in Richard 3rd', probably the English actor, Edmund Kean (1787 – 1833), ca.1830
Physical description
Hand cut stencil on cream, ribbed paper, with handwritten caption reading 'Richard the 3rd'. The stencil shows a head and shoulders outline of Kean as he appeared in the role.
Dimensions
  • Height: 16cm
  • Width: 11.4cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • Keane[sic] as Richard 3rd (Handwritten annotation, centre, base, below image)
  • Transliteration
Credit line
Gabrielle Enthoven Collection
Object history
The stencil was originally found in a scrapbook which contained cuttings from the 1830s.
Subject depicted
Literary referenceRichard III
Summary
Hand cut stencil on cream, ribbed paper, with handwritten caption reading 'Keane in Richard 3rd', probably the English actor, Edmund Kean (1787 – 1833), ca.1830

The stencil shows a head and shoulders outline of Kean as he appeared in the role of Richard III, which appears to have been taken from the 1814 portrait of Kean, by John James Halls, (ca.1797-1854). Kean first played Richard III at the Drury Lane Theatre on 12 February 1814. It became one of his most admired roles, along with Macbeth and Iago. Kean's natural passion and fiery spirit suited a melodramatic style of acting, but he nevertheless made his name playing in Shakespeare. He was said to be at his best in death scenes, and scenes that required intensity of feeling or violent transitions from one mood to another, prompting the poet Coleridge to note that watching Kean act was like 'reading Shakespeare by flashes of lightning'.

Collection
Accession number
S.757-2013

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Record createdDecember 20, 2013
Record URL
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