A Rake's Progress Plate 1 (The Young Heir Takes Possession of the Miser's Effects)

"A Rake's Progress," a series of eight etchings by English engraver and painter William Hogarth, was printed as social commentary for the 18th-century audience. The series focuses on the demise of Tom Rakewell, the heir of a prosperous merchant, who squanders his inheritance on an extravagant lifestyle.

The first image of the series depicts Tom Rakewell, just after his father's death, as he learns he is the heir to his family riches. Throughout the room others mourn the loss while Rakewell shows no compassion as he is fitted for new opulent clothing. At his side stands his loving fiancée whom he now shuns, in hopes of a new life.

William Hogarth
12'' x 15'' Engraving with etching 1735

The Earle W. Newton Collection of British and American Studies

This collection contains reference materials that reveal the interconnections between Great Britain and the United States in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, including 212 paintings, 1,288 prints, rare books, antique maps and other documents by master artists from Britain and the U.S., including William Hogarth, Sir Anthony van Dyck, Thomas Gainsborough, Sir Peter Lely, Joshua Reynolds and others.

1735
12'' x 15''
Engraving with etching
Not On View