Four Prints of an Election

£1,600.00

William Hogarth

Four Prints of an Election

London, J. & J. Boydell ca 1806

Copper engravings

435x550mm

£1600

SKU: 12198 Category:
Description

William Hogarth

Four Prints of an Election

London, J. & J. Boydell ca 1806

Copper engravings

435x550mm

From the collection of George Morant, (1770 – 1846) of 95 Wimpole St, London. A very fine set on mostly uncut sheets kept loose in a folio. Carefully printed and in very good condition.

Morant was a collector and Founder of a business of paper hangers, carvers, gilders and picture frame makers.

The company had offices at 88 Old Bond St,  from 1814, and was appointed as ‘house decorator, carver, gilder & picture-frame-maker to His Majesty’. From 1832 he was appointed again by Her majesty Queen Victoria

 

The general tenor of Hogarth’s Election plates and the issues involved, derive from the notoriously corrupt Oxfordshire election of 1754. Oxfordshire was generally considered to be a Tory stronghold, but the county’s two greatest landowners and most influential magnates the Duke of Marlborough and Lord Guilford were both Whigs. Both felt that their political influence was not as great as their prestige and holdings entitled them to, consequently they resolved to challenge the Tory supremacy, and for the two years prior to the General Election they waged a riotous and unrelenting campaign of vote rigging, gerrymandering, propaganda and corruption, here satirised by Hogarth.

 

  1. An Election Entertainment

Hogarth’s most complex and worked over engraving. A drunken, riotous Whig election party in the coffee room of an inn. Paulson 198, state VIII / VIII.

 

  1. Canvassing for Votes

A village street. Outside one pub one party canvasses the electors, while

outside the another pub the other party rallies its troops. Paulson 199

state 1V / IV.

 

  1. The Polling

A polling booth on election day. Every person entitled by property

qualifications to vote has been pressed to attend including the blind,

crippled, convicted and dying. Paulson 200 state III / III.

 

  1. Chairing the Members

The victorious members are carried aloft by their jubilant supporters. In

actual fact there was no chairing of the members after the Oxfordshire

Election. The Tories were declared the winners, but the results were

immediately referred to Parliament for scutiny, and the Whigs declared the

eventual winners, a fact Hogarth comments on in this engraving with the True Blue slogans carried by the revellers. Paulson 201 III / III.

 

Set of four plates £1600

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