A head and shoulders portrait print of the character King Lear. He has a full beard and flowing white hair blowing in the wind, and he looks upwards with an anguished expression. The portrait is in an oval-shaped frame within the print. Text below reads: 'Engrav'd by Wm Sharp, from a Picture of Joshua Reynolds. King Lear. Publish'd 1st May 1783 by John Boydell Engraver in Cheapside London.'
Image: A head and shoulders portrait print of the character King Lear. He has a full beard and flowing white hair blowing in the wind, and he looks upwards with an anguished expression. The portrait is in an oval-shaped frame within the print. Text below reads: 'Engrav'd by Wm Sharp, from a Picture of Joshua Reynolds. King Lear. Publish'd 1st May 1783 by John Boydell Engraver in Cheapside London.'

Based on a popular painting by Joshua Reynolds, William Sharp's print shows King Lear in the storm.

The young Reynolds represents Lear as a noble, stoically suffering figure. His dramatic use of Lear's white hair blowing in the wind also helped seal the popular image of Shakespeare's character, as a wild-haired, unkempt figure struggling against nature and his own family.

This impression of Sharp's print is likely to have been acquired by George IV, throughout his life a prolific print collector.

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