HOGARTH, William. Four moments of the day.
London, 1738 [19th century print issue]
4 copper-engraved and etched plates. Each approximately 316x390 mm. Margins. Below image, left “Invented Painted & Publish'd by Wm. Hogarth March 25. 1738. According to Act of Parliamen”; center, title. The 'Evening' plate signed at right 'Engraved by B Baron’. Good condition.
Rare complete series of "Four Times of the Day", often found as single plates in Collections and Museums. The four oil paintings were completed in 1736; in 1738 they were reproduced and published as a series of four engravings. They are humorous depictions of life in the streets of London, the vagaries of fashion, and the interactions between the rich and poor, and depict scenes of daily life in various locations in London as the day progresses. Morning shows a prudish spinster making her way to church in Covent Garden past the revellers of the previous night; Noon shows two cultures on opposite sides of the street in St Giles; Evenin depicts a dyer's family returning hot and bothered from a trip to Sadler's Wells; and Night shows disreputable goings-on around a drunken freemason staggering home near Charing Cross. The Evening was engraved by Bernard Baron, a French engraver who was living in London at the time.