The Shrimp Girl
The Shrimp Girl | |
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Artist | William Hogarth |
Year | circa 1740–1745 |
Type | Oil painting |
Dimensions | 63.5 cm × 52.5 cm (25.0 in × 20.7 in) |
Location | National Gallery, London |
The Shrimp Girl is a painting by the English artist William Hogarth. It was painted around 1740–1745, and is held by the National Gallery, London.[1]
The painting, a relatively late work by Hogarth, is one of several in which he experimented with a loose, almost impressionistic style comparable to the work of Fragonard. In its subject matter, it resembles the prints of hawkers and traders popular in Hogarth's day.[2]
The painting depicts a woman selling shellfish on the streets of London, typically a job for the wives and daughters of fishmongers who owned stalls in markets such as Billingsgate. The subject balances a large basket on her head, bearing shrimps and mussels, together with a half-pint pewter pot as a measure. Its size suggests that it was intended as a portrait, rather than a sketch for a larger work.
It is not strictly finished and was still in Hogarth's estate after his death. His widow Jane was said to have told visitors on showing the picture to them: "They say he could not paint flesh. There is flesh and blood for you."[3] It was only sold after his wife's death in 1789, and first received its title The Shrimp Girl in a Christie's sale catalogue.
See also
References
External links
Media related to The Shrimp Girl (Hogarth) at Wikimedia Commons
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- List of works
- Emblematical Print on the South Sea Scheme (1721)
- The Bad Taste of the Town (1724)
- A Just View of the British Stage (1724)
- Before and After (1736)
- The Company of Undertakers (1736)
- Strolling Actresses Dressing in a Barn (1738)
- The Distrest Poet (1741)
- The Enraged Musician (1741)
- Characters and Caricaturas (1743)
- Industry and Idleness (1747)
- Beer Street and Gin Lane (1751)
- The Four Stages of Cruelty (1751)
- Columbus Breaking the Egg (1752)
- Satire on False Perspective (1754)
- Credulity, Superstition, and Fanaticism (1761)
- Five Orders of Periwigs (1761)
- John Wilkes Esq. (1763)
- The Assembly at Wanstead House (c. 1728–1732)
- Before and After (1730–31)
- A Harlot's Progress (1731)
- A Rake's Progress (1732–33, The Tavern Scene)
- Scene from Shakespeare's The Tempest (c.1735)
- Four Times of the Day (1736)
- The Distrest Poet (1736)
- The Shrimp Girl (c.1740)
- Portrait of Captain Thomas Coram (1740)
- Taste in High Life (1742)
- The Graham Children (1742)
- Captain Lord George Graham in his Cabin (1745)
- David Garrick as Richard III (1745)
- Painter and his Pug (1745)
- The Gate of Calais (1748)
- Hogarth's Servants (c.1750)
- The March of the Guards to Finchley (1750)
- Humours of an Election (1755)
- Sealing the Tomb (1755)
- Hogarth Painting the Comic Muse (1757)
- The Bench (1758)
- The Lady's Last Stake (1759)
- Sigismunda mourning over the Heart of Guiscardo (1759)
Marriage A-la-Mode (1745) |
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- The Analysis of Beauty (1753)
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- Sarah Malcolm
- Hogarth Club
- Mary Edwards (Patron)