- A Rake's Progress
"A Rake's Progress" is a series of eight paintings by 18th century English artist
William Hogarth . The canvases were produced in1732 –33 then engraved and published in print form in1735 . The series shows the decline and fall of Tom Rakewell, thespendthrift son and heir of a rich merchant, who comes toLondon , wastes all his money on luxurious living,prostitution andgambling , and as a consequence is imprisoned in theFleet Prison and ultimately Bedlam. [Bindman, David. Hogarth, Thames and Hudson, 1981. ISBN 050020182X] The original paintings are currently in the collection of the Soane Museum in London.Depictions
*In the first painting, Tom has come into his fortune on the death of his father. While the servants mourn, he is being measured for new clothes. He is also rejecting the hand of his pregnant maid, Sarah Young, whom he had promised to marry (she is holding his ring).
*In the second painting, Tom is at his morning levée inLondon , attended by musicians and other hangers-on, dressed in expensive costumes. Surrounding Tom from left to right: a music master; a fencing master; a painter; a dancing master; an architect; an ex-soldier offering to be a bodyguard; a bugler of afox hunt club. At lower right is a jockey with a silver trophy.
*A wild party ororgy is under way at abrothel in the third painting. The whores are stealing the drunken Tom's watch. Already Tom has started wasting his father's money.
*In the fourth, he narrowly escapes arrest fordebt as he travels in a sedan chair to a party atSt. James's Palace to celebrate Queen Caroline's birthday (Saint David's Day ). On this occasion he is saved by the intervention of Sarah Young, the girl he had earlier rejected.
*In the fifth, he attempts to salvage his fortune by marrying a rich but aged and uglyold maid at St Marylebone. In the background Sarah arrives holding her child while her indignant mother struggles with a guest.
*He pleads for the assistance of the Almighty in a gambling den in the sixth painting. Neither he nor the other obsessive gamblers seem to have noticed a fire breaking out behind them.
*All is lost by the seventh painting, and he is incarcerated in a the notorious Fleetdebtor's prison . He ignores the distress of his womenfolk, and demands of money from the jailers: the loss of his mind is indicated by a telescope poking out of the barred window for celestial observation, and analchemy experiment in the background.
*Finally, he ends his days in Bethlehem Hospital (Bedlam), London's celebrated mental asylum with only Sarah Young to comfort him. Some of the details in the pictures may appear disturbing to modern eyes, but were commonplace in Hogarth's day, e.g., the fashionably dressed women in the last painting who have come to the asylum as a social occasion, to be entertained by the bizarre antics of the inmates.Later editions
Igor Stravinsky 's1951 opera "The Rake's Progress ", with alibretto byW. H. Auden andChester Kallman , is loosely based on the story from Hogarth's paintings. In1961 ,David Hockney created his own print edition version of "The Rake's Progress" and has also created stage designs for the Stravinsky Opera.The fy|1946
RKO film "Bedlam", produced byVal Lewton and directed byMark Robson , was inspired by "A Rake's Progress". Hogarth received a writing credit for the film.The UK fund manager Bedlam Asset Management used the series throughout its 2006 Annual Report and Accounts.
The singer
Steve Hogarth of the bandMarillion co-wrote a song `The Rake's Progress' as an interlude on theHolidays in Eden album, released in1991 . "I called the section (between 'This Town' and '100 Nights') 'The Rakes Progress' in reference to the famous series of lithographs by my namesake, William Hogarth... Seems pretentious but it was a joke I couldn't resist." [ [http://www.marillion.com/music/lyrics/holidays.htm#rakes Annotated lyrics (Marillion)] ]The paintings
[Ireland, John. Hogarth Illustrated, George Routledge and Sons, 1884. London]
The engravings
ee also
*"
A Harlot's Progress "
*"Marriage à-la-mode "
*"The Rake's Progress "External links
* [http://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=7031 "A Rake's Progress"] at
The Literary Encyclopedia
* [http://soane.org/rakesprogress.htm "A Rake's Progress"] atSir John Soane's Museum References
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