• The Shrimp Girl’ was created in c.1745 by William Hogarth in Rococo style. Find more prominent pieces of portrait at Wikiart.org – best visual art database.
  • There is flesh and blood for you."[3] It was only sold after his wife's death in 1789, and first received its title The Shrimp Girl in a Christie's sale catalogue.
  • The Shrimp Girl appears unique among Hogarth’s single-figure oil sketches in being painted from life, spontaneously and for its own sake.
  • To mark Hogarth's birthday I have decided to feature one of my favourite paintings, The Shrimp Girl. ... The Shrimp Girl by William Hogarth, 174o-45.
  • painting by William Hogarth (Museum: National Gallery). Credit: Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
  • Miss Mary Edwards. William Hogarth. 1697-1764. The Shrimp Girl. c. 1740. 63.5 x 52.5 cms | 25 x 20 1/2 ins Oil on canvas.
  • [Victorian Web Home —> Visual Arts —> Eighteenth-century Painters —> William Hogarth —> Hogarth and the Victorians —> Next].
  • In the improvised composition of this oil sketch of The Shrimp Girl, we see Hogarth's painterly talent at its very finest.
  • The Shrimp Girl by William Hogarth For at least a century before and after Hogarth painted The Shrimp Girl, most of the travelling sellers of shellfish in...
  • The Shrimp Girl appears unique among Hogarth’s single-figure oil sketches in being painted from life, spontaneously and for its own sake.