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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jane_HogarthJane Hogarth - Wikipedia

    Jane Hogarth (c. 1709 – 1789) was a British printseller and businesswoman who preserved the rights to the artwork of her husband, William Hogarth, following his death. She successfully continued to produce and sell his work for many years.

  2. Mrs. Jane Hogarth | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts. Books. Mrs. Jane Hogarth (ca. 1709 - 1789) RA Collection: People and Organisations. Miss Jane Thornhill [to 1729 March 23]. Profile. Born: ca. 1709. Died: 1789. Gender: Female. Works associated with Mrs. Jane Hogarth in the RA Collection. 6 results. Attributed to William Hogarth.

  3. Jane Hogarth. primary name: primary name: Hogarth, Jane. other name: other name: Thornhill, Jane. Details. individual; British; Female. Life dates. 1709-1789. Biography. Daughter of James Thornhill, married to William Hogarth; continued to publish her husband's prints and copies after his drawings for 25 years after his death. New search.

  4. Jane Hogarth: A Printseller’s Imprint on Copyright Law; By Cristina S. Martinez; Edited by Cristina S. Martinez, University of Ottawa, Cynthia E. Roman, Yale University; Book: Female Printmakers, Printsellers, and Print Publishers in the Eighteenth Century; Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108953535.016

  5. Hogarth eloped in March 1729 with Thornhill’s daughter Jane. The marriage proved stable and contented, though childless. A few months later Vertue remarked on his public success with “conversations,” and in the next few years these small paintings, which acknowledged a great debt to the early 18th-century painter

  6. From our 21st-Century vantage, William Hogarth (1697-1764) is arguably Britain's most influential visual artist. He has been the subject of no fewer than four significant shows in London over the...

  7. Engraver: Francesco Bartolozzi (Italian, Florence 1728–1815 Lisbon) Artist: After William Hogarth (British, London 1697–1764 London) Publisher: Published London by Jane Hogarth (British, 1709–1789) Publisher: Richard Livesay (British, 1750–1826 Southsea, near Portsmouth, Hampshire) Date: March 25, 1782. Medium: Stipple engraving.