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lüder h. niemeyer

- since 1959 -

 

Who  love  the  Strong:

The  Bear  as  Anti-Thesis  to  “Line  of  Beauty”

Hogarth’  ambigious  “The  Bruiser”  ahead  of  the  Finis

Hogarth, William (1697 London 1764). The Bruiser, C. Churchill … in the Character of a Russian Hercules. The writer Churchill whose “Epistle to Hogarth” had provoked the master in the character of a strong Russian bear, hugging a tankard full of porter as seemingly his sole diet, licking at the fresh head. In his left a knotted club referring to contemporary policy. The rest done by Hogarth’s favourite dog Trump trampling the epistle which he treats contemptuously in a manner not natural to the canine species. Engraving by Thomas Cook (c. 1744 – London 1818). Inscribed in the plate: Designed by W. Hogarth. / Engraved by T. Cook. / London Published by G. G. & J. Robinson Paternoster Row June 1st. 1800. 37.8 x 28.9 cm.

William Hogarth, The Bruiser (Cook)

Hogarth catalogue by the Tate Gallery, 1971/72, 220 (2nd H. state before the superposition of the palette by the print illustration, so the Cook version here, too) + Hogarth catalogue Zurich, 1983, 91 (7th state with the superposition), both with illustration.

A  rarer  Sujet  made in the rush (August 1763) on the plate of the self-portrait of 1749 of which he substituted his own head by that of Churchill. Several he added, the titles of the folio volumes were adapted: Great George Street A List of the Subscribers to the North Britons + A new way to Pay old Debts, a comedy by Massenger. Also “The Line of Beauty” fell victim to grinding in face of such a stout, lusty, and rough person as Churchill is described. The print illustration now superpositioning the palette no more taken over by Cook than the subtext.

Churchill, a degenerated writing clergyman, was a partisan of John Wilkes for whose North Briton Gazette he worked and which is symbolized here as club plastered with lies, slaying the cartoon. But, as so often, the work grew far beyond its cause.

For once the removal of the “Beauty Line” led directly to the Analysis complex:

“ Hogarth regarded the likeness to a bear as more insulting than it may generally appear; for him there was an aesthetic antithesis between the earlier and later significance of the plate. In the ‘Analysis’ he wrote that ‘we may … lineally account for the ugliness of the … bear … which (is) totally devoid of this waving-line …’ ”

On the other hand to an intellectual reflection the exchange of the image done at a late moment:

“ There was nevertheless a quality akin to self-destruction in appropriating to his purpose the plate of his own portrait, which served as frontispiece to his collected works. ”

And ‘What may follow God knows. Finis.’ he meditated in this context. But

“ This was not quite the end of the story. Hogarth continued to work on his notes … and his concluding print ‘The Bathos’ was engraved in the following year” (April).

(all Cat. Tate Gallery S. 89.) ‘The Bruiser’ as second but last work thus.

Cook “made a name for himself as Hogarth engraver, too, whose complete work he has engraved in copy” (Thieme-Becker) and whose original format he maintained contrary to all later Hogarth editions in his first, earlier edition. For some sheets not published by Hogarth himself Cook became their first engraver, just as he also gained approval of a contemporary connoisseur as Maximilian Speck von Sternburg.

Excellent print of fine chiaroscuro on solid paper. The presentation itself by the way – contrary to all other later Hogarth-editions in its original folio-size.
Offer no. 7,500 / EUR  496. / Export price EUR  471. (c. US$ 760.) + shipping

– – – The Same in Cook’s popular later, smaller repetition inscribed “C. Churchill” only. 1807. Image size 17.5 x 14 cm. – Trimmed inside the wide white margins. – See the illustration.
Offer no. 8,898 / EUR  138. (c. US$ 223.) + shipping

 


 

„ heute kam ich wieder nach Hause und fand die Bilder vor. Sie sind wohlbehalten angekommen und in einem guten Zustand … Vielen Dank für Ihre Mühe “

(Frau E. K., 24. Juni 2002)