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  1. William Hogarth, A Harlot's Progress, plate 1, 1732, etching with engraving on paper, 31.4 x 38 cm. The first example of these prints, which Hogarth himself termed ‘modern moral subjects’, was A Harlot’s Progress. In this series, we meet the fresh faced Moll Hackabout as she arrives for the first time in London.

  2. Title: A Rake's Progress, Plate 1. Artist: William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London) Author: Related poet Dr. John Hoadley (British, 1711–1776) Date: June 25, 1735. Medium: Etching and engraving; first state of three. Dimensions: sheet: 13 7/8 x 15 7/8 in. (35.2 x 40.4 cm) Classification: Prints. Credit Line: Harris Brisbane Dick ...

  3. El progreso del libertino ( The Rake's Progress ), también conocida como La vida de un libertino, es una serie de ocho cuadros obra del artista William Hogarth. 1 . Las pinturas fueron elaboradas entre 1732 y 1734, siendo grabadas en 1734 y publicadas mediante impresiones en 1735. La serie muestra el declive y la caída en desgracia de Tom ...

  4. A Rake’s Progress („Der Werdegang eines Wüstlings“) ist eine Serie von Gemälden und Kupferstichen des englischen Künstlers William Hogarth, entstanden zwischen 1733 und 1735. Die acht Bilder des Zyklus zeigen den Abstieg und Fall von Tom Rakewell, der nach dem Tod seines reichen, aber extrem geizigen Vaters ein ausschweifendes Leben in London führt und sein Erbe in Bordellen und ...

  5. A series of six paintings, this was the first collection of engravings Hogarth produced. They were so successful that he followed them up with A Rake's Progress in 1935. These prints show the life of a young woman from the country who comes to London and eventually becomes a common prostitute. She dies aged just 23.

  6. 26 de oct. de 2018 · William Hogarth (1697 - 1764) Plate two from William Hogarth's set of eight engravings A Rake's Progress. As for many of Hogarth's best-known engravings, the set was based on preexisting paintings by the printmaker, painted in 1734 and now in Sir John Soane's Museum, London. The set, made as a sequel to Hogarth's Harlot's Progress, was the ...

  7. A Rake's Progress was exhibited in Hogarth’s studio from December 1733 and remained in his possession until the paintings' sale by private auction on 17 February 1745 to Alderman William Beckford (d. 1770) of Fonthill, who paid £184.16s for them.