William Hogarth and Luke Sullivan
(The March to Finchley)
A Representation of the March of the Guards towards Scotland in the Year 1745.
London, Baldwin, Cradock & Joy 1822
Copper engraving
435x550mm
£350
Hogarth’s representation of the chaotic scene at the Tottenham Court Road Turnpike, at the intersection of the Euston and Hampstead Roads, as the British Army assembles to march north to Scotland to put down the Jacobite Rebellion. The central figure is a bemused soldier, accosted on one hand by a young pregnant ballad singer and on the other by a screaming hag waving a copy of the (Jacobite) journal The Remembrancer. Weeping wives cling to their men, a drunken soldier has collapsed in a puddle on the right, piesellers and pickpockets work the crowd, two bruisers have a boxing match on the leftand whores wave goodbye from the windows of the brothel on the right. In the background the vanguard are seen marching north up the hill towards Hampstead. It is said that Hogarth dedicated the plate to His Majesty the King of Prussia, an Encourager of Arts and Sciences ! as an ironic rebuke to George II (notoriously indifferent to the arts), who had rejected Hogarth’s painting of this subject (now in the Coram Foundation, Lincolns Inn Fields). Paulson 184 IX/IX.
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