A great image. I actually use this when I try to teach perspective. Of all the subjects in art and design, perspective is the most difficult to teach. My success rate has to be 20% at best.
Interesting title. "Dr. Brook Taylor's method of perspective made easy : both in theory and practice : in two books, being an attempt to make the art of perspective easy and familar, to adapt it intirely to the arts of design, and to make it an entertaining study to any gentleman who shall chuse so polite an amusement."
The last line of the title evidences that in those days anyone with an education was expected to know how to draw. A few years after this book was published, drawing was introduced as an optional subject in universities.
I had no idea Hogarth had done this. The collection in Sir John Soane's house focusses on 'the rakes progress' and aside from that I only knew of religious works.
As a kid, images like this were SO fascinating to me. Escher was over-represented in my psyche.
(unrelated) I also recall being fascinated by a genre of posters you could buy that showed some location with hundreds or even thousands of people doing stuff in great cartoon detail. (think of of a state fair seen from above)
And here is the book it was made for: https://archive.org/details/gri_33125009352994/page/n65/mode...
Interesting title. "Dr. Brook Taylor's method of perspective made easy : both in theory and practice : in two books, being an attempt to make the art of perspective easy and familar, to adapt it intirely to the arts of design, and to make it an entertaining study to any gentleman who shall chuse so polite an amusement."
The last line of the title evidences that in those days anyone with an education was expected to know how to draw. A few years after this book was published, drawing was introduced as an optional subject in universities.