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<HTML><HEAD> <TITLE>William Hogarth Index'</TITLE></HEAD>
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<A HREF="index.html"><b><span style="font-size: 120%;">Home</span></b></A>
&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;
<A HREF="earlycomics.html"><b><span style="font-size: 120%;">Andy's Early Comics Archive</span></b></A>
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William Hogarth
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<a href="e.hogarth.harlot.s.propgress.html"><img src="t.hogarth.harlot.s.propgress.jpg"></a>
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<a href="e.hogarth.harlot.s.propgress.html">'The Harlot's Progress (1730) </a>
<style="color: #000000;">(large scans)</span>
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Not a comic, but influencial in the history of the medium.
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I'll add his other 'progresses' and sequential series from the same source at a later date. This is from a 19th century reprint version, not his own engravings. But his most authentic 'artistic' version are the paintings (sadly lost for the Harlot), and in a way this second hand (or third hand, for the series which Hogarth let others engrave), are very much in keeping with the reproduceability of popular graphics. <br>
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