Southwark Fair
£800.00
William Hogarth
Southwark Fair
London, J. Boydell 1808
Copper engraving
360x470mm
£800
Willian Hogarth – Southwark Fair
Willian Hogarth – Southwark Fair
One of Hogarth’s most complex engravings.
Southwark Fair was held annually in September, centred on Borough High St, Southwark.
Beginning as a three-day market, it soon spread to fourteen days and became a place of amusement, increasingly notorious for vice, crime and riot, until in 1762 the Court of Common Council suppressed the fair.
The scene shows a crowded square, surrounded by various theatrical booths hung with their decorative show cloths, with the tower (from which Thomas Kidman the rope flyer or early bungee jumper has flung himself), of the old church of St. George the Martyr (demolished 1734) in the background.
On the extreme right, the broken-nosed figure of prize-fighter James Figg sits astride his horse waving a cutlass menacingly, while two men peer avidly into a peepshow.
In the background two plays are being performed The Siege of Troy and Punches Opera, the slack rope dancer Signora Violante swings on her rope hung between two booths and on the right the rickety stage containing the performance of The Fall of Bajazet collapses (appropriately) on top of a crockery stall, a woman operating the ‘Find the Lady’ card fraud, a performing poodle, and a dwarfish bagpipe player. In the centre, amongst the mêlée, a pretty young woman beats a large drum, accompanied by a black trumpet player, and gawped at by a pickpocket and his accomplice, an actor dressed as Julius Caesar is accosted by two bullies, Mother Needham shows off Moll Hackabout (Hogarth’s Harlot, see above) to a prospective customer and a conjuror waves a dove in the air triumphantly. Paulson 131 only state.
William Hogarth
William Hogarth, (born November 10, 1697, London, England—died October 26, 1764, London), the first great English-born artist to attract admiration abroad, best known for his MORAL and satirical engravings and paintings—e.g., A Rake’s Progress (eight scenes,1733). His attempts to build a reputation as a history painter and portraitist, however, met with financial disappointment, and his aesthetic theories had more influence in Romantic literature than in painting.
See full William Hogarth catalogue here