A scene from The Beggar's Opera

Hogarth, William (1697-1764)


Item type:
painting
Date of creation:
ca. 1730
Height:
51.1 cm  (20 1/8 in.)
Width:
61.2 cm  (24 1/8 in.)
framed: 79.2 x 88.6 x 6.9 cm (31 3/16 x 34 7/8 x 2 11/16 in.)
Technique / Medium:
oil on canvas

    Item location

  • National Gallery of Art (Washington, DC)
    [Museum inv. no.: 1983.1.42]

Description

Satirically depicts a dramatic scene from the opera. Many of the actors shown are identifiable. There is no representation of music.
Hogarth represents an important watershed in British art, marking the end of the century-long predominance of Dutch and Flemish painters in England and the beginning of a native school. Although his style was influenced by French rococo artists, Hogarth was a realist and social critic whose subjects came from the London middle classes as he observed them in the streets, in coffee houses, or at the theater.

This vivid scene is a small version of Hogarth's earliest dated painting, now in the Tate Gallery, London. The subject was based on John Gay's popular and long-playing ballad-opera. With its open buffooning of Italian grand opera and its more subtle attacks on the British ruling class and Walpole government, the story was a ready medium for Hogarth's incisive pictorial satire.

The setting (act 3, scene II) is in Newgate prison where Macheath, a highwayman and anti-hero of sorts, has been brought after his arrest for robbery. He stands in the middle of the stage, shackled, legs astride, a dominant figure in brilliant red. To the left is Lucy, Macheath's lover, the daughter of the jailer Lockit. To the right is Macheath's wife, Polly, who kneels by her father, Peachum, the fence who betrayed Macheath and in doing so brought about the present crisis. Both wife and lover plead for Macheath's life to be spared.

People as subjects

Gay, John (1685-1732)

Iconclass

48C86
musical drama, performance of musical drama

Musical works

Pepusch, John Christopher -- Beggar's opera

RIdIM images


Image URLs

image link 1

RIdIM record id

4022