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Tate Britain Exhibition

Hogarth

7 February – 29 April 2007
William Hogarth Marriage a la Mode: The Tete a Tete

William HogarthMarriage a la Mode: The Tete a Tete c.1743

The National Gallery, London

Witty, satirical, subversive and hugely talented, William Hogarth remains one of the most fascinating and innovative artists from the eighteenth century. This superb exhibition is the most comprehensive showing of the artist’s work in a generation and incorporates the full range of Hogarth’s work.

William Hogarth Marriage a la Mode: The Tete a Tete

William Hogarth Marriage a la Mode: The Tete a Tete

Witty, satirical, subversive and hugely talented, William Hogarth remains one of the most fascinating and innovative artists from the eighteenth century. This superb exhibition is the most comprehensive showing of the artist’s work in a generation and incorporates the full range of Hogarth’s work.

Hogarth View of Room 9 at Tate Britain

Hogarth View of Room 9 at Tate Britain

Hogarth View of Room 8 at Tate Britain

Hogarth View of Room 8 at Tate Britain

The exhibition demonstrates that Hogarth wasn’t only a brilliant satirist as it showcases every aspect of his multi-faceted career: his remarkable paintings, ranging from elegant conversation pieces to salacious brothel scenes; his vibrant drawings and sketches; and the numerous engraved works for which he is most famous today, including Gin Lane and Beer Street . His society portraits easily rival those of Gainsborough or Reynolds, and the variety and energy of his output is outstanding.

No other artist’s work has come to define a period of British history as powerfully and enduringly as Hogarth’s. The exhibition explores an artist who was strikingly modern in character, confronting subjects and themes – the city, sexuality, manners, social integration, crime, political corruption, charity and patriotism– that continue to preoccupy us today. The exhibition makes the case that Hogarth was in fact Britain’s first truly modern artist, and shows the relevance of his work to British art now. Works by living contemporary artists inspired by Hogarth are also on display, including Yinka Shonibare and Paula Rego.

Tate Britain

Millbank
London SW1P 4RG
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Dates

7 February – 29 April 2007

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    Alan Morrison on Hogarth

    William Hogarth is recognised as the first great artistic chronicler of modern urban experience. Alan Morrison, lecturer at the University of Westminster, explores Hogarth’s sharp-witted and often satirical observations of life in eighteenth-century Londo

  • William Hogarth

    William Hogarth: past Tate Britain exhibition

  • Artist

    William Hogarth

    1697–1764
Artwork
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