'Gin Lane', 1751. Artist: William Hogarth

'Gin Lane', 1751. Artist: William Hogarth

1-237-250 - The London Archives (City of London)/Heritage Images

'Gin Lane', 1751.The scene is the St Giles slums. A child falls to its death from the arms of its drunk mother who sits with ulcerated legs. A skeletal figure holds an empty glass. Goods are being pawned in order to buy gin, a baby is being fed with gin, a corpse is put into a coffin in the background.The pawnbroker, distiller and undertaker are the only well-off and successful people in the neighbourhood. Third of four states of plate. This print was published in support of a campaign directed against gin drinking among London's poor. Consumption of cheap spirits by the poor had soared in the early eighteenth century, with dire social consequences. Gin inspires violence and careless inebriation. Addiction to spirits leads to negligence, poverty and death.


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. William Hogarth, attributed to: British; English: Artist, painter, engraver
After
  1. William Hogarth: British; English: Artist, painter, engraver

Medium
  1. Engraving

Picture Type
  1. Satire

Geographic Hierarchy

World Europe United Kingdom England Greater London London City of Westminster Westminster

  1. 51 29 09 N , 000 08 01 W

Category Hierarchy

Trade & Industry Occupations

Society & Culture Issues & Causes

Artistic Representations Satires

People Other

Society & Culture Death & Burial


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 3795x4598
File Size : 51,122kb


Aliases

  1. 25277
  1. 0220000162
  1. 1-237-250
  1. 1237250
  1. 162
  1. 25277
  1. A3

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