Visiting The Met? The Met Fifth Avenue is closed Monday, May 5 for The Met Gala. Watch the red carpet livestream on our website at 5:30 pm EDT.

Search / All Results

9,246 results for Hogarth, A Harlot’s Progress, 1, 1732

Image for Wang Hui (1632–1717)
Essay

Wang Hui (1632–1717)

October 1, 2008

By Maxwell K. Hearn

Like a master calligrapher whose writing is a personal synthesis of earlier models, Wang’s paintings combine disparate stylistic influences in totally new and inspired ways to make each “performance” spontaneous and fresh.
Image for The Art of the Nasrid Period (1232–1492)
Essay

The Art of the Nasrid Period (1232–1492)

October 1, 2002

By Department of Islamic Art

Despite its precarious political situation, for over two and a half centuries Granada served as a great cultural center of the Muslim West, attracting leading scholars and literati of the day.
Image for François Boucher (1703–1770)
Essay

François Boucher (1703–1770)

October 1, 2003

By Perrin Stein

Boucher’s most original contribution to Rococo painting was his reinvention of the pastoral, a form of idealized landscape populated by shepherds and shepherdesses in silk dress, enacting scenes of erotic and sentimental love.
Image for Muromachi Period (1392–1573)
Essay

Muromachi Period (1392–1573)

October 1, 2002

By Department of Asian Art

Despite the social and political upheaval, the Muromachi period was economically and artistically innovative. This epoch saw the first steps in the establishment of modern commercial, transportation, and urban developments.
Image for John Townsend (1733–1809)
Essay

John Townsend (1733–1809)

October 1, 2003

By Morrison H. Heckscher

Among his peers, [Townsend] was unique in habitually signing and dating his finest work.
Image for François Boucher, 1703–1770
François Boucher (1703–1770), the friend and protégé of Mme de Pompadour, was the greatest French artist and decorator of the Rococo period. His prolific oeuvre has been both lauded and derided, but it is not until now—in this volume accompanying an exhibition held at The Metropolitan Museum of Art and The Detroit Institute of Arts—that his art has been fully studied and appreciated. Alastair Laing, the principal author of this volume, shows that Boucher's work represents the acme of French eighteenth-century fine and decorative arts. With the exception of a trip to Italy in his mid-twenties to study the work of Renaissance masters, Boucher lived and worked in Paris. His artistic progression, through religious themes, mythological subjects, genre painting, landscape, and portraiture, is thoroughly documented in this catalogue. The patronage of Mme de Pompadour, mistress of Louis XV, ensured a large demand for Boucher's work, including drawings, prints and paintings, as well as tapestry and porcelain designs. His art traveled throughout northern Europe, and formed the essence of the French Rococo style sought after by patrons and emulated by artists in Stockholm, Copenhagen, Saint Petersburg, and Munich. A large collection of these works is illustrated in this volume. In addition, little-known or misattributed early works have been brought to light, showing Boucher's first experiments with composition and color. His designs reproduced in tapestry at Beauvais and Gobelins, and in porcelain at Vincennes and Sèvres, are illuminated in lively discussions by Edith Standen, Consultant, European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and by Antoinette Fay-Halle, Conservateur, Musée Nationale de Céramique, Sèvres, and Conservateur, Musée Nationale Adrien-Dubouché, Limoges. Preliminary essays by Alastair Laing, Pierre Rosenberg, Conservateur-en-chef, Département des peintures, Musée du Louvre, and J. Patrice Marandel, Curator, European Paintings, The Detroit Institute of Arts, provide the necessary foundation for a complete appreciation of the artist's work. Augmented by a detailed chronology and bibliography, this volume comprehensively defines a painter of extraordinary productivity, diversity, and influence. It gives the reader a chance to examine with fresh eyes the range of styles and subject matter of an artist who epitomizes the splendid taste of his time—François Boucher.
Image for Paul Revere, Jr. (1734–1818)
Essay

Paul Revere, Jr. (1734–1818)

October 1, 2003

By Beth Carver Wees

A silversmith, merchant, entrepreneur, family man, and patriotic citizen, Revere led a full and successful life.
Image for James Cox (ca. 1723–1800): Goldsmith and Entrepreneur
Essay

James Cox (ca. 1723–1800): Goldsmith and Entrepreneur

November 1, 2008

By J. H. Leopold and Clare Vincent

Cox produced lavishly ornamented articles for trade with the Far East, first with India and then with China, where the reception of his “toys” or “sing songs,” as the Chinese are believed to have called them, was at first a success.
Image for The Wedding of Stephen Beckingham and Mary Cox

William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London)

Date: 1729
Accession Number: 36.111

Image for A Harlot's Progress, Plate 2

William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London)

Date: before April 1732
Accession Number: 32.35(3)

Image for A Harlot's Progress, Plate 5

William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London)

Date: April 1732
Accession Number: 91.1.132

Image for A Harlot's Progress, Plate 6

William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London)

Date: April 1732
Accession Number: 91.1.133

Image for A Harlot's Progress, Plate 4

William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London)

Date: April 1732
Accession Number: 91.1.131

Image for A Harlot's Progress, Plate 2

William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London)

Date: April 1732
Accession Number: 91.1.129

Image for A Harlot's Progress, Plate 3

William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London)

Date: April 1732
Accession Number: 91.1.130

Image for A Harlot's Progress, Plate 1

William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London)

Date: April 1732
Accession Number: 91.1.128

Image for A Harlot's Progress, Plate 1

William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London)

Date: before April 1732
Accession Number: 32.35(2)

Image for A Harlot's Progress, Plate 5

William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London)

Date: before April 1732
Accession Number: 32.35(6)