|
right of revocation imprint William Hogarth catalog 45 years fine arts & rare books catalogs
Manuscripts
cartography
Bibliophily Old Masters Drawings Prints XXth Century Law / Proclamations Views + Local History Miscellania: Books + Prints The AHA! event December 2008 animals, hunting & environment fishing + angling horses + riding Joseph Georg Wintter The Rugendas Family Index of Artists homepage e-mail
privacy terms & conditions Info / FAQ about us recommended links Frank Words Testimonials |
Visiting the Quack DoctorHogarth, William (1697 London 1764). The Visit to the Quack Doctor. Engraving by Carl Heinrich Rahl (Hoffenheim 1779 – Vienna 1843). (1818/23.) Inscribed: 23. / Plate 3. 21 x 26.6 cm. Marriage à la Mode III. – The third plate of this “ most beautiful painted satire of the century ” (Dobson in Thieme-Becker).
the subtext of a German edition says while Lichtenberg concludes his reflections on this plate with the words
Monsieur de la Pillule, identified by the way as the ill-famed Dr. Misaubin from Hamburg, is not only expert on the field of French illness, but also inventor of two elaborate machines examined and found for good by the Royal Academy of Sciences at Paris: for straightening the shoulders and pulling corks. “By ‘uncorking’ it succeeds to rights again the reputation of a ‘patient’ within the high life”, meaning to cure again certain results (Catalogue Zurich in departure from the usual interpretations deducing from this the possibility of an abortion by cure by magic formulas). And characteristic enough for the bad fate that will catch up with him soon the young count Squanderfield not just sits in front of the open mummy’s cabinet, the tripod on the board above is just – see Industry & Idleness XI – a double of the gallows at Tyburn. The crocodile hanging below the ceiling, however, has lost much of its fatness through the years since Hudibras beats Sidrophel.
– – – The same in engraving by Ernst Ludwig Riepenhausen (1765 Göttingen 1840, university engraver there). Inscribed: 23. / W Hogarth inv. & pinx. / Riepenhausen del. & sculps. 23.5 x 28.5 cm. – Impression on slightly toned minor paper. – Riepenhausen’s engravings after Hogarth (“very estimable”, Nagler) belong to his chief work and not least for their side-correctness they are partly even preferred to Hogarth’s own engravings.
Complete copies of the set and further single plates available .
(Mr. L. A. F., December 6, 2005) |