
William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland
William Hogarth·1732
Historical Context
This 1732 portrait of William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, depicts the son of George II who would later earn notoriety as the victor of Culloden. Hogarth painted the young prince as a child, before the military career that would make Cumberland one of the most controversial figures in British history. William Hogarth, the most original British painter of the eighteenth century, combined the traditions of Flemish and Dutch genre painting with a specifically English tradition of social observation and moral satire to create a body of work unlike anything previously produced in British art. His portraits — frank, specific, unflattering in their psychological directness — belong to a tradition of honest observation that owed more to Rembrandt than to the idealized English portrait convention of his time. His invention of the narrative painting series — paintings designed to be read together, telling a moral story across multiple images — was a contribution to European art that has no precedent and established the tradition of British narrative painting that would culminate in Victorian genre art.
Technical Analysis
The childhood portrait combines royal dignity with youthful freshness, demonstrating Hogarth's ability to humanize aristocratic subjects while meeting the formal requirements of court portraiture.
Look Closer
- ◆The young Cumberland wears a prince's uniform rather than armor — a child's military dress, not adult campaign equipment.
- ◆His posture is confidently upright for a child this age — courtly training in bearing evident even in a young sitter.
- ◆A cannon or military attribute behind him situates the portrait in the martial tradition expected for a royal prince.
- ◆Hogarth's early portrait style shows the careful but not yet fully distinctive handling of Kneller-derived portraiture.






