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Hogarth's Hidden Parts: Satiric Allusion, Erotic Wit, Blasphemous Bawdiness & Dark Humour in Eighteenth-Century English Art.

Autor Bernd K Krysmanski
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 dec 2010
If you think of William Hogarth as a moralist who gave charitable support to foundlings and provided ethical guidance through his pictorial satires, then it is high time you changed your mind. This challenging, thoroughly researched and thought-provoking book reveals many new findings on Hogarth, showing us a different, hidden and immoral English artist: a carouser, a debauchee, and a spiteful joker who mercilessly attacked his contemporaries. Although a pictorial satirist and a successful print-dealer, Hogarth nevertheless wallowed in obscene amusement, frequented prostitutes, possibly had paedophilic tendencies, and seemingly died from the lingering effects of syphilis. Hogarth the popular painter and engraver is shown here as a dark humorist who dealt primarily in sexual double entendre and produced blasphemous motifs that satirically lambasted "high" religious art and debunked the eighteenth-century taste for Old Master work. This book ought to change the way we think about Hogarth.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783487144719
ISBN-10: 3487144719
Pagini: 544
Ilustrații: 304 illus
Dimensiuni: 150 x 210 x 50 mm
Greutate: 1.02 kg
Editura: Georg Olms Verlag AG
Colecția Georg Olms Verlag AG

Recenzii

'Hogarth's Hidden Parts' is a volume of immense scholarship, based on exhaustive and thoughtful readings in the literature of art and social history () (T)he illustrations to Mr. Krysmanski's book are generous and helpful; in all, the volumes offer 304 images, some of them arcane and difficult to find. The book is carefully and exhaustively indexed, devoting fifty pages to citing themes, artists, museums, collections, and historical figures; it is notably generous in how it cites and credits modern scholars. In all these respects, 'Hogarth's Hidden Parts' stands as a lively, iconoclastic commentary that must be consulted and reckoned with by any serious art hstorian. (Sean Shesgreen, The Scriblerian, Vol. XLV, No. 2, Spring 2013)