VANCOUVER.- For All Time: The Shakespeare First Folio celebrates the University of British Columbia Librarys recent acquisition of a complete first edition of William Shakespeare's Comedies, Histories and Tragediesan extremely rare book published in 1623, seven years after Shakespeare's death and credited with preserving almost half of his plays.
UBC acquired the First Folio, formerly owned by a private collector in the U.S., through Christies New York with funding provided by a consortium of donors from across North America and with the generous support of the Department of Canadian Heritage.
The opportunity to purchase a First Folio arose in early 2021. Katherine Kalsbeek, head of rare books and special collections (RBSC) at UBC Library, knew that with so few copies left in private hands the library had to act. The First Folio is a cornerstone of English literature and with this donation, we are able to bring this cultural treasure into public ownership," Kalsbeek said. "Adding a First Folio to the UBC Library collection represents a milestone in terms of our development as both a library and as a university.
Preserving this precious book in UBC Library makes it accessible for future generations, inspires new knowledge, and furthers our commitment to engage in world-class research in the arts and humanities, said Santa J. Ono, UBC president and vice-chancellor.
In partnership with the
Vancouver Art Gallery, this tangible piece of cultural heritage will be exhibited to the public starting January 15, 2022, along with three subsequent seventeenth-century Folio editions of Shakespeare's plays, marking the first time all four Folios have been displayed in Vancouver.
We are thrilled to co-present and host this capsule exhibition of the Folios at Vancouver Art Gallery. This project fits with the Gallerys history of projects that explore the intersections of disciplines, media and popular culture; and places art in broader cultural contexts, shares Anthony Kiendl, Vancouver Art Gallery CEO and Gallery Director. The Gallery serves as an essential site in our community for us to come together, learn and discuss the ideas of our timesand Shakespeares work has provoked centuries of debate. This provides a compelling opportunity to come together with our partners and create something that none of us could accomplish singlehandedly on our own.
The First Folio, as it's also recognized, includes 36 of Shakespeares 38 known plays, edited by his close friends, fellow writers and actors. It is the first collected edition of Shakespeares plays and the foundation of his enduring legacy and reputation. When Shakespeare died in 1616, only about half of his works had appeared in print. Eighteen playsincluding The Tempest, Macbeth, As You Like It, The Winters Tale, and Julius Caesar remained unpublished in any form. The First Folio thus not only gave us their first appearance in print but was also the means by which they were preserved and passed on to posterity.
Cultural properties of the First Folios magnitude and capacity to engage the publics imagination are not evenly distributed around the world. Of the estimated 235 copies that remain worldwide, there is only one other copy in Toronto, Canada. UBCs acquisition of a First Folio, now on display at the Vancouver Art Gallery, provides great public access to one of the worlds greatest English language cultural treasures.
Having the book here in Vancouver on the unceded lands of the Musqueam, Squamish, Tsleil-Waututh people allows us to do what scholars around the world have been doing for a while now, and that is to think about Shakespeare's work in place-based terms, shared Dr. Patricia Badir, professor of English and head of the department of English language and literatures, UBC. The books presence here will provide us with opportunities to think about how Shakespeare's works have been agents of colonialism and provoke us to think about the ways in which Shakespeare's plays can help us think through local iterations of global questions about sexuality and gender, religious tolerance, politics and power, race and social justice, and even climate justice.
For All Time will be accompanied by an audio mobile guide featuring the voice of Founding Artistic Director, Bard on the Beach Shakespeare Festival Christopher Gaze.
The Vancouver Art Gallery will also launch a three-part webinar series on William Shakespeares plays. In 1606, during an outbreak of the bubonic plague when theatres were shuttered in England, Shakespeare wrote three of his most famous tragedies: King Lear, Macbeth, and Antony and Cleopatra. In recognition of the cyclical nature of history and our own global pandemic situation, the Vancouver Art Gallery focuses on these plays during our 2022 webinar series Contemporary Shakespeare in collaboration with UBC and with Bard on the Beach.