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Imagining Shakespeare: Mythmaking and Storytelling in the Regency Era

Imagining Shakespeare: Mythmaking and Storytelling in the Regency Era

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Dates Sat, Oct 4, 2025 – Sun, Aug 2, 2026

Venue Stuart and Mimi Rose Rare Book and Manuscript Exhibition Hall

Tickets Free; timed-entry pass recommended

Displayed together for the first time since 1805, 14 paintings from the Boydell Shakespeare Gallery in London will be on view at the Folger. The paintings, created by leading artists of 18th-century England, depict scenes from Shakespeare’s plays.

The Boydell Gallery contributed to the story of Shakespeare as a genius from birth—the Bard, a symbol of British imperialism and economic power. This exhibition offers visitors the chance to consider both the stories Shakespeare created and the stories that were created about him.

About the Boydell Shakespeare Gallery

Founded by John Boydell (1720–1804) and his nephew Josiah (1752–1817), the fashionable London picture gallery opened in 1789 and lasted until the collection was dispersed at auction in 1805. By then it had grown to hold 173 paintings (over half of them life-size) by 35 different artists. Only a third of these works are known to still exist.