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The Flower Portrait (Image 漏 RSC)

Culture Show exclusive: National Portrait Gallery research proves iconic Shakespeare portrait to be 19th Century fake



Last night on 主播大秀 TWO, The Culture Show followed a team of experts at the National Portrait Gallery as they uncovered the truth about one of the world's most recognisable images of Shakespeare - which for decades has had its authenticity hotly debated.

The Flower Portrait - owned by the Royal Shakespeare Company, and named after the local brewing family who donated it to the theatre - was revealed to be a 19th Century fake rather than a portrait of Shakespeare painted during his lifetime, as previously thought.

Also on the show, eminent ballerina Sylvie Guillem revealed her belief that classical ballet has failed to do enough to attract new audiences.

The Flower Portrait

At the time of The Flower Portrait's donation to the RSC, it was widely assumed to be a genuine image of Shakespeare painted in his lifetime and bore the inscription of 1609.

However, with a hazy legacy, doubts have grown about its authenticity.

Painstaking scientific analysis of the picture has now revealed crucial clues about the image.

X-rays reveal that the image is painted on top of another picture, a 16th Century Madonna and Child, and while paint-sampling shows that most of the image is painted with pigments from around the Bard's lifetime, crucial details on the doublet were painted with a pigment only available in the early 19th Century.

Technical analysis rules out the possibility that this was simply a later re-touch of the original picture, as the layers of paints are well integrated and must have been done at the same time.

The Flower Portrait is one of three works under investigation in advance of an exhibition, Searching for Shakespeare, to commemorate the National Portrait Gallery's 150th anniversary next year.

No single portrait of England's most famous playwright and poet has ever been agreed on.

Experts led by National Portrait Gallery 16th Century Curator, Dr Tarnya Cooper, are hoping to unearth the truth behind three 'contender' portraits of the Bard - the Flower Portrait, The Chandos Portrait and the Grafton Portrait - to reveal if any of them were painted during his lifetime.

The results of the other two investigations will be covered in The Culture Show later this year.

Sylvie Guillem

Currently at Sadler's Wells in London, performing with the Ballet Boyz, Sylvie Guillem spoke out about what she sees as a lack of modern ideas in British ballet today, particularly in attracting new and younger audiences.

She told last night's Culture Show: "If you don't project the right image then you have a good part of your audience that is disappearing, especially when your audience is getting older.

"If you want to attract new audiences, then you need to talk a different language - because frankly, people don't think anymore, they just reproduce.

"So you will always see male dancers calling 'taxi' each time they have nothing else to do on stage, instead of asking 'Why am I doing this stupid gesture that means nothing?'.

"Well, they are doing it because someone told them they should do it."

She went on to talk about the lack of innovation in classical ballet over recent years: "There is a way of doing classical ballet that is much better; it's a caricature sometimes.

"Maybe 70 years ago, it wasn't. But now it is a caricature. It should evolve much better than that - it's staying as it was and this I don't understand".

Notes to Editors:

The full report was broadcast on The Culture Show on Thursday 21 April 2005, 主播大秀 TWO, 7.00pm.

If any of this material is used, The Culture Show must be credited.

A fully-illustrated catalogue containing all the results of the technical analysis conducted by the National Portrait Gallery will be published to coincide with the exhibition Searching for Shakespeare in March 2006.

For images please contact the Press Office at the National Portrait Gallery.


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Category: Factual & Arts TV
Date: 22.04.2005
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