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The Development of Hogarth's series A Rake's Progress


The Development of Hogarth's series A Rake's Progress - Tate

A Rake's Progress c.1733–5 is a series of eight satirical paintings by the English artist William Hogarth (1697–1764), an artist renowned for his innovative ...

A Rake's Progress - Wikipedia

A Rake's Progress (or The Rake's Progress) is a series of eight paintings by 18th-century English artist William Hogarth. ... The canvases were produced in 1732– ...

William Hogarth, A Rake's Progress - Smarthistory

A Rake's Progress (1735) was Hogarth's second series and proved to be just as well loved. The main character is Tom Rakewell—a rake being a old fashioned term ...

A Rake's Progress by William Hogarth: A Story of a Man's Decline

Due to his decisions, Rakewell ultimately ends up in prison and in a psychiatric hospital. Hogarth created the series in 1734, however the ...

Hogarth's Materials and Techniques: How was A Rake's Progress ...

A Rake's Progress c.1733–5 is a series of eight satirical paintings by the English artist William Hogarth (1697–1764), an artist renowned for his innovative ...

A Rake's Progress I: The Heir - Soane Collection

A Rake's Progress comprises eight paintings and is the second of Hogarth's painted series, the sequel to A Harlot's Progress. It is possible, according to David ...

A Rake's Progress | artble.com

In A Rake's Progress Hogarth depicts the story of Tom Rakewell, a young man who inherits money from his late father and squanders it on expensive clothes, ...

A Rake's Progress VIII: The Madhouse - Soane Collection

In his Autobiographical Notes, Hogarth claimed credit for inventing the genre of pictorial sequences that told a story: '[I] turn[ed] my thoughts to still a ...

Hogarth: A Rake's Progress - Bridgeman Images Blog

Hogarth: A Rake's Progress · 1. The Heir. Tom Rakewell, the son of a recently-deceased financier, has arrived home after inheriting his fortune.

The Sequel: Hogarth's "A Rake's Progress" (1734–5) - YouTube

... series, Mark Hallett (Director of Studies, Paul Mellon Centre), Meredith Gamer (Assistant Professor, Columbia University), and Elizabeth ...

The Story in Paintings: Hogarth's progress

The series A Harlot's Progress and A Rake's Progress told detailed and complex narratives using paintings alone.

A Rake's Progress - (London Museums) - Fiveable

A Rake's Progress is a series of paintings and engravings by William Hogarth that depicts the moral decline of a young man who squanders his fortune on a ...

A Rake's Progress: Hockney's Reinterpretation of Hogarth's ...

Hockney's own interpretation of A Rake's Progress in the 1960s exemplifies the modern evolution of satirical art. Hockney's version, a series of ...

William Hogarth: Place and Progress - The Brooklyn Rail

Placed in dialogue in the Rear Gallery are A Harlot's Progress (1732) and A Rake's Progress (1734). These are cautionary narratives, with trajectories ...

Exhibition, Hogarth — Zanesville Museum of Art

One of Hogarth's earliest series, A Rake's Progress tells a fictional tale of the immoral rake or womanizer named Tom Rakewell. In only eight engravings ...

A Rake's Progress by William Hogarth - Art history

A Rake's Progress (1732-4) was a series of eight oil paintings that were preparatory works for engravings and prints portraying the downfall of the fictional ...

A Rake's Progress VIII | Bethlem Museum of the Mind

A Rake's Progress, a series of paintings (later published as engravings) depicting scenes from Tom's life, was Hogarth's exposé of the cruelty, depravity and ...

A Rake's Progress | work by Hogarth - Britannica

... Rake's Progress is discussed: William Hogarth ... Hogarth's other series, such as A Rake's Progress (1735) and A Harlot's ... Hogarth's subsequent development.

Hogarth: Place and Progress | London Historians' Blog

However, The Rake's Progress have been removed and added to the main exhibition space of this show. In addition we are treated to Marriage A-la- ...

A Rake's Progress, 1961–63 | David Hockney - Morgan Library

... series. Inspired by William Hogarth's 1735 engraving series of the same title, Hockney transformed the tale of an aristocrat who squanders his wealth into ...