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Art

Art in the Folger collections
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Free cultural works! Come get your free cultural works!
Collation

Free cultural works! Come get your free cultural works!

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

It’s official: pictures in the Folger’s Digital Image Collection are now licensed CC BY-SA! That is, they can be used under a Creative Commons Attribution–ShareAlike 4.0 International License, one of the two Creative Commons licenses “approved for free cultural works.” That’s almost…

Four states of Shakespeare: the Droeshout portrait
Collation

Four states of Shakespeare: the Droeshout portrait

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

So the mysterious eye of this month’s crocodile belongs to no other than Shakespeare, as some readers immediately recognized: Droeshout’s engraving of Shakespeare on the title page of the First Folio More specifically, it is Shakespeare’s left right eye as depicted…

Timon of Athens: nine not-actually-lost drawings by Wyndham Lewis
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Timon of Athens: nine not-actually-lost drawings by Wyndham Lewis

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

In 1998, modernist art and literature scholar Paul Edwards wrote about “a set of watercolours and (apparently) ink drawings on the theme of Shakespeare’s Timon of Athens” by Wyndham Lewis that had been published as a portfolio in 1913. Paul Edwards, “Wyndham…

V, u/v, and library transcription rules
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V, u/v, and library transcription rules

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

You know the saying, “the great thing about standards is that there are so many to choose from?” You know Sarah’s post about the transcription practices used in The Collation, and Goran’s posts about V and U in titles and…

A print pricked for transfer
Collation

A print pricked for transfer

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

So, what’s up with the crocodile mystery for March? As I said in the comments, Tom Reedy was verrrrry close with “It looks like some sort of device using punctures along a line to allow powder or ink to pass through…

Acquiring and adopting books
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Acquiring and adopting books

Posted
Author
Melissa Cook

Each year around this time, the Folger hosts Acquisitions Night benefiting the Library’s Acquisitions program. Showcasing some of the most interesting, beautiful, and rare items we’ve purchased for the collection in the past year, the event invites donors to “adopt” selected…

See the 1960s Royal Shakespeare Company, now at the Folger!
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See the 1960s Royal Shakespeare Company, now at the Folger!

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

Want to see Patrick Stewart in his mid-20s? How about photos of set design models for Peter Hall’s 1959 Coriolanus, starring Laurence Olivier? Come see the Folger’s newly acquired Gordon Goode Collection of Royal Shakespeare Company photographs. Left: Ian Holm…

Happy New Year's "E"
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Happy New Year's "E"

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

Perpetual calendars in the early modern period relied on knowing a given year’s “dominical letter” or  “Sunday letter”—the letter corresponding to the date of the first Sunday in January where A=1, B=2, C=3, and so on. This New Year’s Eve, we’re…

A look back at our 2013
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A look back at our 2013

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

Here on The Collation, it’s been a busy 2013. Today’s post will be our 68th of the year, and as of December 15th, we’d racked up 46,012 visits from 33,411 unique visitors, producing 67,361 pageviews this year. *phew* It’s gratifying that we…

Mr. Folger's most expensive painting
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Mr. Folger's most expensive painting

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

There’s a persistent rumor that “Mr. Folger never paid more than x for a painting.” The value of x depends on who’s telling the story, but it’s generally around $2,000 and is used as evidence that he wasn’t interested in paintings.…

Can you spot the differences?
Collation

Can you spot the differences?

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

Have a look at the coat of arms worn by Edwin Booth (1833–1893) in the title role of Shakespeare’s King Richard III. Notice something wrong? Richard III tunic worn by Edwin Booth in the 1870s. Hint: The conventions Victorian aesthetics…

Conserving the Cosway Portrait of Shakespeare
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Conserving the Cosway Portrait of Shakespeare

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Author
Dawn Rogala

A guest post by Dawn Rogala Editor’s note: Folger conservators are internationally known for their expertise in book and paper conservation. When it comes to conserving paintings, though, we turn to outside experts like Dawn Rogala of Page Conservation, Inc. Here,…

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