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New Tudor-Bacon-Shakespeare Painting Sheds Light on Elizabeth I's Secret Son

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On October 14, 2007 Keith Stillwagon, popular artist of Gulfport, Florida unveiled his latest painting, "Tudor-Bacon-Shakespeare." Commissioned on June 6th by an anonymous source, the painting is dedicated to Lawrence Gerald, creator of the Baconian website, www.SirBacon.org , in celebration of the website's recent Ten Year Anniversary on October 10th.

Gulfport, FL (PRWEB) October 15, 2007 -- On October 14, 2007, Keith Stillwagon, popular artist of Gulfport, Florida unveiled his latest painting, "Tudor-Bacon-Shakespeare." Commissioned on June 6th by an anonymous source, the painting is dedicated to Lawrence Gerald, creator of the Baconian website, www.sirbacon.org , in celebration of the website's recent Ten Year Anniversary on October 10th.

TudorBaconShakespeare
TudorBaconShakespeare

The painting honors the memory of the great Sir Francis Bacon and proclaims the theory that Bacon was born a Tudor Prince secretly to Queen Elizabeth I by placing a Tudor crown upon his head. Furthermore, Keith has incorporated symbols in the painting that hint at Bacon's authorship of the Shakespeare works. The mystery of who wrote Shakespeare becomes less cloudy when it is considered that Elizabeth's high intelligence was genetically passed down to Bacon who was raised with an extensive education and is already a strong candidate for the authorship.

The title of the painting, Tudor-Bacon-Shakespeare, brings the three names of one man into a single portrait of Sir Francis Bacon for the first time in history. Shakespeare's Sonnet 105 touches on this three-in-one theme very plainly in lines 13 and 14:

Fair, kind, and true, have often lived alone.
Which three till now, never kept seat in one.

The three-in-one portrait of Bacon is now immortalized in Keith Stillwagon's painting; "Fair" represents the name Tudor, as the theory goes Bacon was born in secret to Queen Elizabeth I and Robert Dudley; "Kind" represents the beautiful words of William Shakespeare, Bacon's pen-name; and "True" represents Bacon in his pubic and known personality and who began his famous essays with "Of Truth."

The three names, Tudor-Bacon-Shakespeare, never kept seat in one, until October 14, 2007. The painting can be seen online at KeithStillwagon.com.

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Robert Fowler
Keith Stillwagon Studios
727-388-9442
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