William Hogarth,
Characters and
Caricaturas, a
print
Published in London, England, AD
1743
Hogarth's subscription ticket announces
that he is a comic artist, not a caricaturist
This
etching
was designed as a subscription ticket - a receipt presented to all
those who had placed an advance order for Hogarth's series,
Marriage à la
mode.
It
refers to Henry Fielding's preface to
Joseph Andrews (1742),
where Fielding had praised Hogarth as a comic history painter and
drawn a parallel distinction between the comic and the burlesque in
writing and between comedy and caricature in painting. The comic
painter imitates nature, while the caricaturist distorts and
exaggerates nature. Hogarth, Fielding had said, expresses
'the affections of men on canvas' and his figures
'seem to
think'.
Hogarth
particularly disliked caricature because it was an Italian fashion
that was being introduced to England by the same people who dealt
in foreign 'old master' paintings and drawings.
These dealers and drawing masters encouraged their pupils and
patrons to think more highly of what was old or continental than of
modern English art. At the base of his design Hogarth contrasts
'characters' taken from Raphael's
cartoons
(in the Royal Collection, now in the Victoria and Albert Museum,
London) with caricatures by Leonardo, Carracci, and the fashionable
contemporary Italian, Pier Leone Ghezzi. Above, a crowd of
expressive, but not caricatured, faces demonstrate the variety and
subtlety of character.
R. Paulson, Hogarths graphic works, 3rd edition (London, The Print Room, 1989)
D. Bindman, Hogarth and his times: serious, exh. cat. (London, The British Museum Press, 1997)
T. Clayton, The English print, 1688-1802 (New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 1997)
R. Paulson, Hogarth, vol 2 (Cambridge, Lutterworth, 1991-93)