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William Hogarth

William Hogarth (10 November 1697 – 26 October 1764) was a major English painter, printmaker, pictorial satirist, social critic and editorial cartoonist who has been credited with pioneering western sequential art. His work ranged from realistic portraiture to comic strip-like series of pictures called "modern moral subjects". Much of his work poked fun at contemporary politics and customs; illustrations in such style are often referred to as "Hogarthian".

He trained as an engraver in the Rococo tradition, and by 1720 was established in London independently as an engraver on copper of billheads and book illustrations. In his spare time he studied painting, first at the St Martin's Lane Academy and later under Sir James Thornhill, whose daughter he married in 1729. By this time he had begun to make a name with small conversation pieces, and about 1730 he set up as a portrait painter. At about the same time he invented and popularized the use of a sequence of anecdotal pictures 'similar to representations on the stage' to point a moral and satirize social abuses. A Harlot's Progress (6 scenes, c. 1731; destroyed by fire) was followed by A Rake's Progress (8 scenes, Sir John Soane's Museum, London, c. 1735), and Marriage à la Mode (6 scenes, National Gallery, London, c. 1743), which each portray the punishment of vice in a somewhat lurid melodrama. Each series was painted with a view to being engraved, and the engravings had a wide sale and were popular with all classes. They were much pirated and Hogarth's campaigning against the profiteers led to the Copyright Act of 1735. 'I have endeavoured', he wrote, 'to treat my subjects as a dramatic writer: my picture is my stage, and men and women my players.'

Hogarth, however, was much more than a preacher in paint. His satire was directed as much at pedantry and affectation as at immorality, and he saw himself to some extent as a defender of native common sense against a fashion for French and Italian mannerisms. In spite of his rabid xenophobia, Hogarth made some attempts to show he could paint in the Italian Grand Manner (Sigismunda, Tate, London, 1759). These, however, are generally considered his weakest works, and apart from his modern morality subjects he excelled mainly in portraiture. Captain Coram (Coram Foundation, London, 1740), which he regarded as his highest achievement in portraiture, shows that he could paint a portrait in the Baroque manner with complete confidence and without artificiality. However, he could not flatter or compromise and had not the disposition for a successful portraitist. From 1735 to 1755 he ran an academy in St Martin's Lane (independent of the one at which he had studied), and this became the main forerunner of the Royal Academy. In 1753 he published The Analysis of Beauty, a treatise on aesthetic theory which he wrote with the conviction that the views of a practising artist should carry greater weight than the theories of the connoisseur or dilettante.

Hogarth was far and away the most important British artist of his generation. He was equally outstanding as a painter and engraver and by the force of his pugnacious personality as well as by the quality and originality of his work he freed British art from its domination by foreign artists. Because so much of his work has a 'literary' element, his qualities as a painter have often been overlooked, but his more informal pictures in particular show that his brushwork could live up to his inventive genius. The vigour and spontaneity of The Shrimp Girl (National Gallery, London, c. 1740), for example, have made it deservedly one of the most popular British paintings of the 18th century.

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William Hogarth - Industry and Idleness, Plate 9; The Idle 'Prentice betrayed and taken in a Night-Cellar with his Accomplice

William Hogarth - Industry and Idleness, Plate 9; The Idle 'Prentice betrayed and taken in a Night-Cellar with his Accomplice

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 117
William Hogarth - John Wilkes engraving

William Hogarth - John Wilkes engraving

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 144
William Hogarth - John Wilkes, Esq

William Hogarth - John Wilkes, Esq

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 136
William Hogarth - La carriera del libertino, L'eredita

William Hogarth - La carriera del libertino, L'eredita

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 254
William Hogarth - La carriera del libertino, La 'Levée'

William Hogarth - La carriera del libertino, La 'Levée'

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 232
William Hogarth - La levée

William Hogarth - La levée

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 145
William Hogarth - Lame theater

William Hogarth - Lame theater

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 126
William Hogarth - Marriage a la mode reproduction

William Hogarth - Marriage a la mode reproduction

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 135
William Hogarth - Marriage à la Mode, 2. The Tête à Tête

William Hogarth - Marriage à la Mode, 2. The Tête à Tête

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 239
William Hogarth - Marriage à-la-mode, The Countess's Morning Levee

William Hogarth - Marriage à-la-mode, The Countess's Morning Levee

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 377
William Hogarth - Marriage à-la-mode, The Marriage Contract

William Hogarth - Marriage à-la-mode, The Marriage Contract

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 416
William Hogarth - Marriage of convenience

William Hogarth - Marriage of convenience

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 145
William Hogarth - Masques and operas

William Hogarth - Masques and operas

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 146
William Hogarth - Moderne Mitternachtsunterhaltung

William Hogarth - Moderne Mitternachtsunterhaltung

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 154
William Hogarth - Moses Brought Before Pharaoh's Daughter

William Hogarth - Moses Brought Before Pharaoh's Daughter

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 222
William Hogarth - Moses is adopted by Pharaoh's daughter

William Hogarth - Moses is adopted by Pharaoh's daughter

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 152
William Hogarth - Noon

William Hogarth - Noon

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 122
William Hogarth - O 'lever'

William Hogarth - O 'lever'

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 126
William Hogarth - O the Roast Beef of Old England

William Hogarth - O the Roast Beef of Old England

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 157
William Hogarth - Our stages of cruelty - Second stage of cruelty, second of series of engravings

William Hogarth - Our stages of cruelty - Second stage of cruelty, second of series of engravings

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 145
William Hogarth - Pablo with Félix

William Hogarth - Pablo with Félix

Date: 01/06/2010
Owner: Administrator
Views: 151
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