_-_The_Staymaker_(%5E_The_Happy_Marriage_V%2C_The_Fitting_of_the_Ball_Gown)_-_N05359_-_National_Gallery.jpg&width=1200)
The Staymaker (? The Happy Marriage V: The Fitting of the Ball Gown)
William Hogarth·1745
Historical Context
This painting, known as The Staymaker or possibly The Happy Marriage series, dating to around 1745, shows Hogarth's interest in scenes of domestic life and fashion. The intimate setting of a fitting room allowed Hogarth to observe social interactions with the penetrating eye that animates his satirical narratives. William Hogarth's narrative paintings and series were among the most culturally significant works produced in eighteenth-century Britain — popular enough to be widely engraved and distributed, intellectually sophisticated enough to reward sustained examination, and morally engaged enough to function as social criticism of the highest order. His "modern moral subjects" — Marriage A-la-Mode, The Rake's Progress, Industry and Idleness — invented the narrative series in painting and gave British art its own tradition of social comedy and critique independent of the continental academic tradition. His influence on subsequent British culture — on Dickens, on the satirical cartoon tradition, on Victorian narrative painting — was foundational.
Technical Analysis
The genre scene demonstrates Hogarth's fluid brushwork and keen observation of gesture and expression, creating a composition that hovers between genre painting, social satire, and narrative art.
Look Closer
- ◆The corset being fitted gives the painting its alternative title — the staymaker adjusts the garment with the absorbed professional concentration that Hogarth gives to all skilled workers.
- ◆The woman being fitted has an expression of good-natured tolerance for the slightly intrusive process — Hogarth observes the social dynamic of a fitting room with his usual acuity.
- ◆The light entering through the window creates the warm, intimate quality of an interior genre scene that Hogarth rarely produced — this is a private domestic moment rather than a public moral spectacle.
- ◆The secondary figures, if present, are engaged in adjacent activities that build up the picture of a household going about its business — Hogarth's narrative method of accumulating social information.






