
Portrait of Juliana Cornelia de Lannoy by Niels Rode. 18th century.

Portrait of Juliana Cornelia de Lannoy by Niels Rode. 18th century.
This gallery contains 6 photos.
The Tempest is one of my favourite William Shakespeare plays. I thought that it would be fun to share, in no particular order, some of the many artworks inspired by this classic.
Number Seven:

Miranda by Frederick Goodall, 1888

Caricature of W. Somerset Maugham

“You and your Nero Wolfe recipes!”
From The American Magazine, June 1949.
The Tempest is one of my favourite William Shakespeare plays. I thought that it would be fun to share, in no particular order, some of the many artworks inspired by this classic.
Number Six:

A Study of Emma, Lady Hamilton, as Miranda by George Romney
Two Nero Wolfe illustrations from the March 1938 issue of The American Magazine. The artwork, from top to bottom, is by: Vladimir Bobri and Rico Tomaso.

Too Many Cooks

Nero Wolfe in Too Many Cooks, March 1938
Two illustrations from Rex Stout’s The Red Bull, which was published in The American Magazine in 1938. The novel version came out in 1939, under the title Some Buried Caesar. The artist is Ronald McLeod.

Nero Wolfe in The Red Bull (aka Some Buried Caesar)

Wolfe was seated at the table…
The Tempest is one of my favourite William Shakespeare plays. I thought that it would be fun to share, in no particular order, some of the many artworks inspired by this classic.
Number Five:

Prospero and Miranda by William Maw Egley, circa 1850