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Shakespeare & Beyond

Drawing Shakespeare: Henry IV, Part 1

Drawing of the Folger bas-relief depicting a scene from Henry IV, Part 1
Drawing of the Folger bas-relief depicting a scene from Henry IV, Part 1
Drawing of the Folger bas-relief depicting a scene from Henry IV, Part 1

Drawing by Paul Glenshaw of the Folger bas-relief depicting a scene from Henry IV, Part 1

This is the tenth post in a series by artist Paul Glenshaw about drawing the bas-reliefs by sculptor John Gregory on the front of the Folger Shakespeare Library building. The series examines the bas-reliefs one by one; each sculpture depicts a scene from a different Shakespeare play. Today’s post is about the bas-relief of a scene from Henry IV, Part I.

The end of the line

I approached the last sculpture with equal parts of eagerness and reluctance. I was keen to be finished with the series—I like to say that projects are best discussed in the past tense. But I also didn’t want the fun to stop. I was on a roll, and had been deep in the zone for three months with these drawings. But there it was—the last sculpture, and for the last time, John Gregory upended my preconceived notions about its composition.

After the complex dynamics of drawing Hamlet, the scene from Henry IV, Part I looked amusing, but staid and simple: three figures, the two on the edges facing each other and glancing the one in the center, who’s seated. But as I got into it, I learned once again that these sculptures sometimes tell their stories with delicate nuance—even one where a character is wearing a pillow on his head.