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King Henry the Eighth

Act IV, Scene II

John Boydell (1719–1804), visionary publisher & Lord Mayor of London, made his large fortune publishing engravings, including views of England & Wales. With a group of influential citizens, he embarked on a massive project utilizing the best English artists to capture the memorable scenes in Shakespeare’s works in a series of large paintings.

Those artists included J. M. W. Turner, William Blake, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Will Hamilton, Henry Fuseli, Josiah Boydell, Francis Wheatley, Angelica Kauffmann, and Benjamin West. In 1789, these paintings were showcased in a gallery on the most fashionable avenue in London, England, the Pall Mall.

Engravings from these paintings were first published in 1802, then working with the original plates, republished in 1852. This project marked a dramatic shift in the art world. Artists who had previously worked principally from the commissions of wealthy patrons and royalty now saw the possibility of earning a living in a less restrictive manner. Other entrepreneurs followed Boydell’s lead resulting in the development of a School of Historical Painters.

Sadly, the French Revolution intervened, closing off the mainland European market to Boydell who was forced to shutter his gallery. Almost bankrupted, Boydell’s estate sold the collection of 167 paintings in 1804, a few months after his death. Most have been lost to posterity, but Richard Westall's painting, from Henry VIII, remains in the collection of the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C.

The lasting impact of Boydell’s project was to forever popularize Shakespeare’s works in the eyes of the general public and to change the course of English art, greatly broadening the artist’s ability to earn a living beyond portraiture and views.

Shearjashub Spooner (1809–1859) restored and published a two-volume set of Boydell’s plates in 1852 under the title The American edition of Boydell's Illustrations of the dramatic works of Shakespeare, by the most eminent artists of Great Britain. Spooner was a successful dentist in New York who acquired Boydell’s plates and sold the restored version for $100 for 100 plates. The edition is notable by its strong impressions and many of the rich details were enhanced by re-engraving the worn areas. Essentially, these are later states of the earlier prints, and include the plate numbers in the title area. The prints we are offering here are from this American edition.

King Henry the Eighth

Act IV, Scene II

The Abbey of Leicester

Abbot of Leicester, Wolsey, Northumberland and attendants

Queen Katharine and her women at work – Cardinals Wolsey and Campeius

Painted by R. Westall
Engraved by R. Thew

Published 1852 by Shearjashub Spooner, New York.

PLATE 81

SHEET SIZE (APPROX.): 27.75 x 22 inches

IMAGE SIZE (APPROX): 23.5 x 17 inches

Original text page accompanies engraving

NOTE: ANY "RAINBOW" EFFECT ON THE IMAGE ABOVE IS AN ARTIFACT OF DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY AND NOT PRESENT ON THE ACTUAL ANTIQUE ENGRAVING. THE DARVILLS' DIGITAL WATERMARK IS FOR IMAGE THEFT PREVENTION.

 Foxing in lower and right margins

Public Library Los Angeles, Cal blind stamp (embossed) lower left corner, extending into plate mark but well away from image. This would not be noticeable once matted and framed.

$325