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The eighteenth and nineteenth centuries saw huge changes in
Britain. The nation’s power base continued to shift from the
monarchy to one where Court and Parliament had a shared role.
Britain became an imperial power, its dominion extending around the
globe. Known as the Age of Enlightenment, radical ideas about taste,
science, economics, literature and art brought about a new
understanding of the world. A specific British culture emerged, one
that spoke of individual achievement, and where the new middle
classes acquired land and personal wealth to match that of the
gentry. Enclosure of common land brought agricultural benefits for
landowners, but drove many of the poor to eke out a living in the
cities. While France suffered major social upheavals through
revolution, dissension in Britain never brought down the state.
Queen Victoria’s long and peaceful reign in the nineteenth century
occurred alongside further rapid changes in the face of industrial
development.
Whereas in the seventeenth century almost all of the painters
attached to the Court originated from Holland, Belgium and France,
William Hogarth (1697-1764) heralded an era that has since been
described as the Golden Age of British Painting. For the first time,
artists created works that spoke of the rich variety of their own
time – an age of discovery from which Britannia arose triumphant,
childhood was invented, and women began to question their place in
society. Ordinary people became a legitimate subject for art, and
satirists lampooned kings, courtiers and country folk in equal
measure. Every aspect of British life came under the scrutiny of the
artist, whose works remain a rich and satisfying record of the age.
Mary Kisler
Mackelvie Curator, International Art |
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William hogarth
Simon Lord Lovat
1746
Etching
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, purchased 1983

Walter Sadler
Married
Oil on Canvas
Mackelvie Trust Collection, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki

William Frith
Pope Makes Love To Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
1852
oil on canvas
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, gift of Sir Frank Mappin, 1974
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