mercredi 26 septembre 2018

William Hogarth - The Strode family c.1738

William Hogarth 1697-1764


 William Hogarth - The Strode family c.1738


William Hogarth - The Strode family c.1738
huile sur toile-87 x 91 cm
Tate,London



Hogarth's early success as a painter was based on his exceptionally lively small-scale 'conversation pieces', or informal group portraits, which became fashionable in the 1730s. They reflected the move away from the solemn formality of the previous generation and attempted to show the sitters in easy, natural poses, in a domestic setting, engaged in everyday activities like conversation or drinking tea. The main subject here is the wealthy city magnate William Strode, seated at table with his new wife Lady Anne Cecil, his relative Col. Strode, and his tutor Dr Arthur Smyth, later Archbishop of Dublin. The paintings on the wall are reminders of their recent tour of Italy. On the floor is the tea caddy.




CONVERSATION PIECE

A conversation piece is an informal group portrait popular in the eighteenth century, small in scale and showing people – often families, sometimes groups of friends – in domestic interior or garden settings

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire