Currently not on view
Canvassing for Votes,
1757
Engraved by Charles Grignion I, English, 1717–1810
Outside of an alehouse in the village outskirts, members of both parties offer bribes to a farmer.
A celebrated painter of satirical commentaries on contemporary English life, William Hogarth was primarily known in the eighteenth century through his prints. Apprenticed at an early age to a London silver engraver, Hogarth was able to maintain his financial and editorial independence through the publication and subscription sale of prints he engraved himself after his painted compositions. Hogarth often designed his “Modern Moral Subjects” in narrative series. The Election series of four paintings, together with the four prints he engraved after them, represents the most substantial accomplishment of the artist’s later years. As a group, Four Prints of an Election lampoons the 1754 parliamentary elections for the Tory stronghold of Oxfordshire: an election notorious in eighteenth-century English politics for the unbridled levels of bribery committed by liberal Whigs and conservative Tories alike.
Information
1757
Europe, England, London
- John Trusler, The Works of William Hogarth (London: Jones, 1833)., pp. 105–114 (illus.)
- Ronald Paulson, Hogarth's Graphic Works (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965)., no. 122
- Ronald Paulson, Hogarth’s Graphic Works (London: The Print Room, 1989)., no. 122
- "Acquisitions of the Art Museum 1988," Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 48, no. 1 (1989): p. 35-59., p. 53