By Me William Shakespeare exhibition
By Me William Shakespeare, A Life in Writing
By me William Shakespeare offered a once-in-a-generation opportunity to explore Shakespeare’s will, as well as other unique documents that witnessed his life. Through original research, scientific analysis and a new digital installation, the exhibition looked at why the documents were created and what they tell us about the world’s most famous playwright.
Academics from the London Shakespeare Centre at King’s and
specialists at The National Archives carefully selected the
nine most nationally important documents held by The National
Archives relating to Shakespeare’s life and presented them
together for the first time for the exhibition.
The
documents track Shakespeare’s life as a citizen of London, a
businessman, a family man and servant to the King and even
possibly a thief and a subversive. They explore both his
domestic and professional lives, what it meant to live in the
Elizabethan and Jacobean eras and the social impact of his
plays.
Visitors were able to encounter Shakespeare in his own words and in his own handwriting. They were taken on a journey from the birth of the Globe Theatre through to Shakespeare’s dying days in Stratford-upon-Avon. The exhibition was a once-in-a-generation opportunity to see these key documents, including four of his six known signatures, alongside carefully selected artefacts and paintings from various institutions.