The artist himself remains as famous for his engravings today as he does his paintings, which is relatively rare within art history. William Hogarth, played by Toby Jones ("Harry Potter", "Captain America"), recalls the life and death of an alluring and mysterious woman he once knew. Historically, Hogarth created a series of paintings and prints called A Harlot's Progress. Six prints, forming the set A Harlots Progress.

The story is based on the series of paintings entitled A Harlot's Progress by William Hogarth. Upon arriving in London from the country she encounters an older woman. The series had 1,240 subscribers and was so popular that pirated versions were quickly issued. Along the way we get keen insight into the culture/society of the time. First appearing as a series of paintings, it was then reproduced as engraved prints. The story is based on the series of paintings entitled A Harlot's Progress by William Hogarth.Hogarth's work is inspired by his interactions with an eighteenth-century prostitute Mary Collins. The series was the first of Hogarth's 'Moral Progresses,' and, like the following 'Rake's Progress' and 'Marriage a-la-Mode', were a sardonic twist on the popular allegories of religious development and revelation in works like Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress. It is not without humor and beauty and this helps to tell of the tragedy of people who were cursed by poverty and merciless moral codes but aspired to better times nonetheless. William Hogarth’s A Harlot’s Progress charts the unfortunate fall of the likeable Moll Hackabout from pretty young ingénue to prostitute after her arrival in London. A complete set of six engravings of Hogarth's famous moral satire, A Harlot's Progress. It originally aired on Channel 4 on 2 November 2006. Einleitende Bemerkungen A Harlot’s Progress ("Der Lebenslauf einer Hure") ist der Titel einer Serie von ursprünglich sechs Gemälden, die der englische Künstler William Hogarth (1697-1764), der für seine gesellschaftskritischen Bildsatiren bekannt ist, 1730-31 malte. Hogarth intended the pictures to stand without accompanying text. In this study, two of William Hogarth's graphic series, "A Harlot's Progress" and "A Rake's Progress," are examined in detail. Harlot's Progress was later published by William Innell Clement in columns of his newspaper Bells Life in London #330 on 22nd June 1828. https://www.videodetective.com/movie/a-harlots-progress-59462 A Harlot's Progress (85) IMDb 7.0 1h 39min 2006 13+ Follow the life of a beautiful, troubled prostitute in this drama. A Harlot's Progress is a 2006 British television film directed by Justin Hardy and starring Zoe Tapper, Toby Jones, Sophie Thompson and Richard Wilson. This movie is a fictional imagining of how these came into being and Hogarth's relationship with, and ultimate love and compassion for, the harlot. A courtesan (Zoe Tapper) beguiles 18th-century British artist William Hogarth (Toby Jones), but his pursuit of her threatens to destroy his career, health and happiness. The Harlot's Progress is so well done that it brings the viewer squarely into the conditions of that time. A Harlot's Progress is a 2006 British television film directed by Justin Hardy and starring Zoe Tapper, Toby Jones, Sophie Thompson and Richard Wilson. The work is primarily didactic; Hogarth's intention was to reveal through the girl's life the follies and miseries of vice with a view to providing his audiences with a negative example for their own conduct. In 1731 the humane artist William Hogarth is struck by the plight of prostitutes who have descended into Mother Needham's brothels and determines to paint a series of cautionary tableaux,using young prostitute Mary Collins. Diese Ölbilder wurden jedoch am 13. A Harlot's Progress was a series of engravings (1732) and paintings (1731) in which artist William Hogarth tells the story of Miss Hackabout who moves to London and experiences a trying time. A Harlot's Progress tells the story of the fall and speedy destruction of a girl who comes from the country to London to earn a livelihood. The story is filled with irony. Hogarth's work is inspired by his interactions with an eighteenth-century prostitute Mary Collins. The six prints telling the cautionary story of Moll Hackabout, a harlot, were published in April 1732, the first of Hogarth’s ‘Modern Moral Subjects’. A Harlots Progress (auch bekannt als The Harlots Progress) ist eine Serie von sechs Bildern (1731, jetzt zerstört) und Gravuren (1732) des englischen Künstlers William Hogarth.Die Serie zeigt die Geschichte einer jungen Frau, M. (Moll oder Mary) Hackabout, die aus …