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William Hogarth, Marriage A-la-Mode (including Tête à Tête)

The National Gallery in London houses six paintings by William Hogarth, titled "Marriage A-la-Mode," which depict the consequences of arranged marriages for economic benefit. The series follows the Squanderfields, an aristocratic family, and their tragic story, highlighting the immorality and self-interest of the characters involved. Hogarth's work serves as a moral lesson and a critique of the 18th-century society.

William Hogarth, Marriage A-la-Mode, c. 1743, oil on canvas, 69.9 x 90.8 cm (The National Gallery, London)
1. The Marriage Settlement
2. The Tête à Tête
3, The Inspection
4. The Toilette
5. The Bagnio
6. The Lady's Death
Speakers: Dr. Steven Zucker & Dr. Beth Harris.
Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.

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  • piceratops ultimate style avatar for user Ari Mendelson
    At , are those some sort of braces on the child's feet? Does syphilis cause some sort of nerve damage (sort of like polio) that would make it necessary to brace a child's feet if a child is so unfortunate as to inherit syphilis from its parents?
    (8 votes)
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  • piceratops ultimate style avatar for user Ari Mendelson
    At , I can't help but notice that the print is the mirror image of the painting. Why is that? Does it have something to do with the technique used in making the print from the painting?
    (8 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user hmslydia
    At it says the dog is a symbol of greediness, presumably because he is eating off the table, but the dog looks like he is starving. You can see his rib cage. One of the other viewers made a comment that a pig's head is a symbol of poverty (I don't know if that's true or not). I think the dog symbolizes the couple's neglect.
    (8 votes)
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  • purple pi purple style avatar for user Hadee
    (The Tête à Tête; dog at ) Is Hogarth using the dog to symbolize fidelity, or, in this case, the lack of it?

    While we're at it, is the connection between a dog and fidelity a common symbol throughout art, and if so, where does it come from?

    I ask if it's a common symbol because I remember there was a dog in Eyck's Arnolfini Portrait which was a symbol of fidelity. I then wondered if the dog tugging at the woman's bonnet in The Tête à Tête was Hogarth's way of showing a... common? symbol in a different light.
    (5 votes)
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  • purple pi purple style avatar for user Residuum
    This is a wonderful series of paintings. It's both comedic and morbid at the same time. I also enjoy how it tells a story along it's six panels. Was the multi panel story format unique to this artist at this time or was it a common theme? And would a family typically purchase all six of these prints or just a singular piece?
    (5 votes)
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  • piceratops ultimate style avatar for user Gaugoli
    At a painting is discussed which is hanging on the wall but kept behind a curtain (as it is lewd). Was it a real practice at the time to do this?
    (3 votes)
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  • leaf grey style avatar for user Edward M. Van Court
    At you mention the marriage for love vs money, wasn't this the tail end of the time when romantic love was considered a tragedy?
    (4 votes)
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  • mr pink red style avatar for user Michał Ciach
    Wasn't eating pig's head a symbol of poverty? It's described as that in Angela's Ashes, but the story in the book takes place 200 years later. It would make sense though, along with the modest room, meaning that the daughter was abandoned by her father - who eventually takes even her ring - and that money was actually the only thing he cared about.
    (4 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user mpicheria
    In the second painting what song is written on the sheet music?
    (3 votes)
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  • starky sapling style avatar for user Izana
    How would the child have syphilis in the last painting, "The Lady's Death"?? Would it mean she was abused?
    (2 votes)
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    • duskpin tree style avatar for user Anna Nestor
      because syphilis is an STI, it can be transmitted to the child if the mother was infected. this usually happened during birth because the child would have direct contact with the infected areas. I do not think a father could give a child this diseases really, it cannot be passes down genetically.
      (2 votes)

Video transcript

(music) ("In The Sky With Diamonds" by Scalding Lucy) We're in the National Gallery in London and we're looking at a set of six paintings by William Hogarth who's best known for making prints, not paintings. Beth: The 18th century is an interesting moment especially in England and France where we have the beginnings of the industrial revolution. As a result, a widening middle class that wants to buy art. Steven: You have the land of aristocracy which in some ways beginning to lose power to a new merchant class that is becoming powerful because it's becoming wealthy. Beth: Whereas before, we had art that was serving the aristocracy, princes, monarchs, the church, we now begin to have art that is made for this growing middle class audience. We have prints that are being sold to a wide public and art becoming a commodity, something that large numbers of people buy. Steven: Prints are a lot less expensive than paintings. Hogarth's intent here was to use these paintings as a model for the prints that he was going to produce and then he would sell his prints for about a schilling a piece. That was more than a working class person could afford, but it was well within the means of this new middle class. Beth: Hogarth is becoming a kind of artist entrepreneur, something that might be very familiar to us in the 21st century when art is still so closely allied to commerce, to galleries, to moneymaking. Steven: This is so targeted to that new middle class because it is a very deeply moral set of images. It's also a set of images that is full of fun and makes fun of the aristocracy. The entire set is known as "Marriage A-la-Mode" and is prompted by this concern in the 18th century that marriages were sometimes arranged for economic benefit rather than for love. Beth: Marriage A-la-Mode means "Modern Marriage" or "The Marriage of the Day." The entire series, these six paintings, tell a story of an aristocratic family named wonderfully, the Squanderfields, suggesting that they squandered their aristocratic fortune. Lord Squanderfield has to have his son marry the daughter of a wealthy merchant so he can maintain his estate and all his worldly possessions. The wealthy merchant's daughter gets in return the aristocratic title. Steven: What we have is an exchange. It is a kind of economic deal that's taking place, that's being brokered here. Let's look at the painting. On the right, we see Lord Squanderfield. He's pointing to his family tree which begins with a Medieval knight suggesting what he's bringing to the table is this great lineage. Over on the far left, you see his son in blue. He's picking some snuff out of a box and he looks really like a dilettante. Beth: He's actually looking in the mirror, too, sort of gazing at his own reflection. Steven: We have no sympathy for him whatsoever. Beth: The woman behind him, who he's going to marry, he has his back to, he's not paying any attention to her. This is an arranged marriage. The woman is being talked into it, someone we're going to see later in the story. Steven: His name is Silvertongue and he's a counsellor. Clearly Hogarth is making fun of him and talking about him as kind of a smooth talker. Beth: What's interesting is the way that Lord Squanderfield, with his gout-ridden foot, he's situated in between the family tree and this dowry that he's being paid. He's saying, "I'm bringing a lot to the table here. I've got this long, aristocratic lineage. This money that's piled up, this isn't even enough for me." Steven: That's because, if you look out the window, he's building a new mansion and he needs to finance that. We see a lawyer at the table and we also see the merchant himself that is that young woman's father, and they're attending to the business transaction. Beth: The architect stares out the window at the building that he's dreaming of constructing. Steven: Everybody is in this for their own self-interest with the exception of the young couple; the young man, self-involved ... the young woman looks inconsolable. Beth: These two individuals will add to the disaster that is their end here. Steven: Let's move to the second canvas. This is "Tête-à-Tête" which means head-to-head, face-to-face. Beth: The husband has come home from a night of gambling and drinking and ... Steven: And womanizing. Beth: And womanizing. Steven: How can we tell? Beth: The dog's sniffing at what looks like a woman's bonnet in his pocket, and he looks like he hasn't slept at all. His wife, looks like she's had some fun of her own while her husband goes away. Her bodice is undone, she looks flirtatious as though perhaps her lover has just left when her husband's come home. She seems to be signaling with a mirror held above her head, to her lover perhaps, the chair is overturned, an instrument is on the floor, a music book is open. This implication of lovemaking has taken place here and has just ended when the husband has come home. Steven: Music was a traditional symbol of pleasure. Beth: And sensuality and lovemaking. In the room just past where they are, we see images of saints, so we have Hogarth commenting on immorality of this couple. Steven: To make sure that we don't miss these signals, Hogarth has placed a third figure in the foreground. He's a kind of accountant and you can see that he's had it; he holds receipts, he holds bills and he's thrown his hands up. He can't get this young couple to take their finances seriously. Beth: If you look at the mantlepiece, we've got all sorts of knick-knacks lined up there that look like they have been recently purchased and look inexpensive and gaudy compared to this aristocratic environment with these oil paintings and gilded frames. Steven: That's the contrast that's important I think, for Hogarth here. He's making this sharp, distinction between these tawdry things that they've brought in, this young couple, and the classicism that is a part of this aristocratic life. Beth: The aristocracy has this reputation that they've inherited, these values that have accrued to them over centuries, but they're values that don't reflect the reality of their lives. Steven: We can also see an addition, perhaps a painting that the man has brought in, it's partially obscured by a curtain and all that's visible is a nude foot. Beth: On a bed. Steven: On a bed, so this would have been a very clear signal in the 18th century to a lewd painting. In all of these paintings actually, the artwork really tells a meta story. They comment on a scene that's being enacted and we can see that right over the mantle. We have a Classical sculpture, but its nose is broken as if it had been knocked over at some party. Behind it, a painting of Cupid among the ruins, that is; love itself is here ruined, love itself has become a disaster. Let's look at the third painting. This canvas is called "The Inspection" and it takes place in a doctor's office. Beth: The apothecary or the doctor on the left seems to be cleaning his glasses which makes one worried about the kind of inspection he's going to perform. The woman behind him is obviously his assistant, but they're both clearly suffering from Syphilis. Steven: This is an important point; Lord Squanderfield, the younger Lord Squanderfield, actually has a sign of Syphilis which is that large, black form on his neck and we see that throughout these canvases. We know he is likely visiting prostitutes. He is living up a life in debauchery right from the beginning, clearly infecting his young wife. Beth: And here clearly has infected a young woman who he's brought with him to the doctor's office. who seems to be applying some kind of ointment to a sore on her mouth. It's just ghastly. Steven: Hogarth is doing everything he can to remove any kind of sympathy we could possibly have for this young man. Beth: He seems to be saying to the apothecary, "Your medicine isn't working. Give me my money back." Steven: The woman seems to be quite angered by that whereas the apothecary himself seems to be not particularly concerned. Look at the kind of caricature that Hogarth brings to the rendering of these figures. The apothecary himself, that's just a disreputable face. Beth: But again, the surroundings tell us something about the figures. In the medical cabinet, you see a model of a human figure next to a skeletal model. Even on the left side we see a skull which is also a symbol of death, but no one is taking seriously the fact that they're going to die one day. Steven: In fact, the young Lord Squanderfield here seems to be in a very good mood. Let's move onto the fourth canvas. Beth: This one is called "The Toilette" so that means here that the woman is at her dressing table. She's having her hair done, she's getting all dressed up, she's having her makeup done and she's surrounded by her friends. Notice that she's not with her child. We do have an indication that she's had a child because we have a string of coral beads that would have been used for teething for children, but her child is never in sight. She's not a good mother. She's hanging out with her friends instead. Steven: She's in her bedroom and her bedroom is this very public place which is not so uncommon for the aristocracy, but we see on the left, for a second time now the counselor Silvertongue and he looks right at home. This to the 18th century would have suggested that he was actually illicitly the young woman's lover now. Remember, he was the one who was trying to talk her into the marriage, to console her. He has taken full advantage. Beth: There's music-making and drinking and obviously figures who are also suffering from Syphilis. The figure on the far right seems to be holding tickets and pointing to an image of a masked ball. Steven: The paintings on the wall that we're seeing are all so important and make a kind of comment on the scene that we see paintings that are about the trespassing of norms of behavior. Of course, that's exactly what this painting's about. Beth: Two of the paintings on the wall are about Zeus disguising himself in order to have a love affair and that's exactly what we're going to see actually in the next scene. Steven: Here it's night. Here is the fifth painting. Here we're no longer in an aristocratic house, we're in a place of disrepute. This is the kind of room that you would hire when you didn't want anybody to know what you were doing. What we see is the young woman on her knees as her lover, that would be Silvertongue, flees out the window. He's fleeing because he's just impaled her husband with his sword. She's beseeching him asking for forgiveness because Silvertongue and the young woman were caught in the act. Beth: They have clearly been at a masked ball. We see their discarded clothing, we see a mask. Steven: So in the last scene, Hogarth sums up by showing the death of the young woman, so now the husband and the wife are dead. The wife has died because she's poisoned herself when she's read in the newspaper that's at her feet, that her lover, Silvertongue, has been hanged. Beth: For the murder of her husband, that's right. We see the nurse bringing her her child to say goodbye to its mother. It's a terrible scene. We also see a Syphilis spot on the child's cheek so we know that the child is sick and this couple is irredeemable. The entire practice of a marriage that's based on this kind of economic exchange instead of love. It's really indicted. Steven: Look ... Her very father is taking a good ring from her finger even as she lays dying. Beth: The dog on the right is another symbol of greed as it steals meat from the table. Steven: And not just meat, but a pig's head actually. We can see that we're back in her home. This is not the aristocratic family of the Squanderfields, and you can see the Thames River just outside, you can see the city crowding in and it's a reminder of the way in which London had changed so radically in the 18th century. Beth: So the great Victorian novelist Thackeray wrote about the set of six paintings and summed up the moral. He wrote, "Don't listen to evil silver-tongued counsellors. Don't marry a man for his rank or a woman for her money. Don't frequent foolish auctions and masquerade balls unknown to your husband. Don't have wicked companions abroad and neglect your wife, otherwise you will be run through the body and ruin will ensue and disgrace and Tyburn. Tyburn is the place where criminals would be hanged. (music) ("In The Sky With Diamonds" by Scalding Lucy)