Edmund Kean as Richard III
Figurine
ca.1840 (made)
ca.1840 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Earthenware flatbacks and figurines for mantelpiece decoration were first produced in Staffordshire in the late 1830s. The earliest datable figures appear to be those of Queen Victoria. Production of earthenware figures continued throughout Victoria's lifetime, but although they were still made after her death in 1901, few appear to have been produced after 1905. During their heyday, however, they were produced in vast numbers, usually modelled after prints. Since they were produced in moulds, they were relatively cheap and easy to make. They represented a wide variety of subjects but those of actors and actresses were especially popular.
This figurinr represents the celebrated actor Edmund Kean (1787-1833) as Richard III, the role he first played to great acclaim at Drury Lane on 12 Febuary 1814. Kean was the son of an actress at Drury Lane Theatre and as a child he was paraded as an infant phenomenon, billed as ‘The Celebrated Theatrical Child, Edmund Carey, not eleven years old'. He became a strolling player, dancer and tumbler with Richardson's company and worked in the provinces until he made his first adult stage appearance in 1804. It wasn't until 1814 however, when he appeared as Shylock at Drury Lane Theatre, that he made his name and became known as the great but erratic actor described by the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge as revealing Shakespeare by 'flashes of lightning'.
This figurinr represents the celebrated actor Edmund Kean (1787-1833) as Richard III, the role he first played to great acclaim at Drury Lane on 12 Febuary 1814. Kean was the son of an actress at Drury Lane Theatre and as a child he was paraded as an infant phenomenon, billed as ‘The Celebrated Theatrical Child, Edmund Carey, not eleven years old'. He became a strolling player, dancer and tumbler with Richardson's company and worked in the provinces until he made his first adult stage appearance in 1804. It wasn't until 1814 however, when he appeared as Shylock at Drury Lane Theatre, that he made his name and became known as the great but erratic actor described by the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge as revealing Shakespeare by 'flashes of lightning'.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Edmund Kean as Richard III (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Moulded lead-glazed earthenware, with painted decoration |
Brief description | Figurine of Edmund Kean (1787-1833) as Richard III which he first played at Drury Lane Theatre, 12 February 1814. Glazed earthenware, Staffordshire, ca.1840 |
Physical description | Staffordshire flat-backed glazed earthenware figurine of Edmund Kean as Richard III. He stands on a cream integral base of irregular eliptical shape with gold line, leaning slightly to the right, with his left leg bent. His right fist is clenched by his side with a hole in it where a rapier would have been (now lost), and his left hand is out to the left and has been remodelled. He is dressed in a royal blue doublet, and white, green and tan striped knee breeches, decorated with the same vertical stripes as those on the short oversleeves of his cape, black boots with yellow trim, an orange cloak trimmed with ermine fur, and a large white hat with a black cross at the front. He has shoulder length black hair, a moustache and a faint gold crucifix around his neck. Slightly modelled and coloured orange at the back, to represent his cloak. |
Dimensions |
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Subject depicted | |
Summary | Earthenware flatbacks and figurines for mantelpiece decoration were first produced in Staffordshire in the late 1830s. The earliest datable figures appear to be those of Queen Victoria. Production of earthenware figures continued throughout Victoria's lifetime, but although they were still made after her death in 1901, few appear to have been produced after 1905. During their heyday, however, they were produced in vast numbers, usually modelled after prints. Since they were produced in moulds, they were relatively cheap and easy to make. They represented a wide variety of subjects but those of actors and actresses were especially popular. This figurinr represents the celebrated actor Edmund Kean (1787-1833) as Richard III, the role he first played to great acclaim at Drury Lane on 12 Febuary 1814. Kean was the son of an actress at Drury Lane Theatre and as a child he was paraded as an infant phenomenon, billed as ‘The Celebrated Theatrical Child, Edmund Carey, not eleven years old'. He became a strolling player, dancer and tumbler with Richardson's company and worked in the provinces until he made his first adult stage appearance in 1804. It wasn't until 1814 however, when he appeared as Shylock at Drury Lane Theatre, that he made his name and became known as the great but erratic actor described by the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge as revealing Shakespeare by 'flashes of lightning'. |
Bibliographic reference | Staffordshire Portrait Figures of the Victorian Era by P.D. Gordon Pugh, p.426 |
Collection | |
Accession number | S.328-1984 |
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Record created | December 15, 2005 |
Record URL |
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