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Society Engraved installed in the Hood Museum's Gutman Gallery. Photo by Jeffrey Nintzel.
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William Hogarth, A Rake’s Progress (detail), plate 8, 1735, etching and engraving on laid paper. Purchased through the Florence and Lansing Porter Moore 1937 Fund, the Mrs. Harvey P. Hood W’18 Fund, the Jean and Adolph Weil Jr. 1935 Fund, the Barbara Dau ’78 Fund for European Art, and the Class of 1935 Memorial Fund; 2015.9.8.
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William Hogarth, A Rake’s Progress, plates 8, 1735, etching and engraving on laid paper. Purchased through the Florence and Lansing Porter Moore 1937 Fund, the Mrs. Harvey P. Hood W’18 Fund, the Jean and Adolph Weil Jr. 1935 Fund, the Barbara Dau ’78 Fund for European Art, and the Class of 1935 Memorial Fund; 2015.9.8.
Series
A Space for Dialogue 94
About
The prints in this exhibition reflect William Hogarth’s (1697–1764) pointed, shrewd, and satirical social and political commentary. His work appealed to a broad public, but this popularity prompted questions into the ethical issues around the production and distribution of prints, the right to profit from artistic labor, and the nature of what constitutes an original work of art.
A Space for Dialogue: Fresh Perspectives on the Permanent Collection from Dartmouth’s Students, founded with support from the Class of 1948, is made possible with generous endowments from the Class of 1967, Bonnie and Richard Reiss Jr. ’66, and Pamela J. Joyner '79.
Exhibition Curator
Jules Wheaton
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