The Marriage Settlement - The first painting in the National Gallery’s Marriage a La Mode and Hogarth’s missed opportunity
16th December 2007
A part of my follow-up game plan for the already completed (but in need of a publisher) Ten Sexiest Moments in Mythology is a series of further titles along similar lines. Thus: Ten Sexiest Moments in Art, ditto …History, ditto …Television, …the Movies, …Ancient Greecene, …Ancient Rome, ……Cyberspace,…Advertising, etc., etc.. I keep a list of possible titles to which I add from time to time when another one occurs to me. At the moment the total possible titles identified by me stands at 37.
In the areas of human endeavour listed above I have omitted to mention the most prolific, best known, and therefore most obvious source for sexy moments: the Bible. It runs a close second to mythology for extraordinary tales of human and extra-human sexuality and as the author of the Moralized Ovid recognized, even the most kinky deeds of the most lascivious characters in Greek and Biblical legend can be laundered into role models for the Christian faithful. “Prefigure” is the verb that, alchemy fashion, turns base sexual misconduct into golden examples of piety.
This train of thought was set in motion by a consideration of the picture-within-the-picture paintings on view in Hogarth’s Marriage Settlement which is the first painting in the National Gallery’s Marriage a La Mode series. In my desire to get to the picture behind a curtain in the second painting (the Tete a Tete) as quickly as possible I leap-frogged the first painting. Most of the pictures-within-pictures in the Marriage Settlement are monumentally dull and it needs an especially febrile imagination to find a sex angle. It can be argued that as the setting is in Lord Squander’s palatial mansion the choice of pictures hanging on the walls has to reflect his Lordship’s taste as well as serving to drive the narrative forward. I do not think this stacks up because one the pictures in the Marriage Settlement is the very very sexy Judith in the tent of Holofernes and in the fourth painting La Toilette we will find Lot and his Daughters both of which stories are shoe-ins for the Ten Sexiest Moments in the Bible. So why not, Mr Hogarth, some more of the same?
The life of King David provided many opportunities for erotic art but killing Goliath was not one of them unless, as we shall presently see, you have the balls of a Donatello. (I could, perhaps, have worded this better.) Instead of David killing Goliath Hogarth could have given us David and Bathsheba, David and Jonathan, the Rape by one of David’s sons of his daughter Tamnar, David gathering 200 Philistine foreskins or David and Abishag. The last two subjects have gone entirely unnoticed by artists. While the harvesting of foreskins in order to obtain the hand in marriage of King Saul’s daughter would not be a turn-on for most people (but might have made a good Bateman cartoon) I find it extraordinary that the story of Abishag (a personal favourite) has been overlooked by the Old Masters.
Abishag, named kind of Happy Families style, was a young girl who was put into the old King’s bed when he was dying to warm him up. To no avail, the Bible tells us, but it was worth a try. Using what resources are available (that do not include any benefit derived from having been trained to draw) I have done what I can to fill this quite serious gap in the erotic canon.
Abishag was a Shunamite and she gave her name to a form geriatric therapy involving the application of a young virgin to the affected parts: Shunamitism. Among doctors who prescribed Shunamitism for their patients were the “Father of English Medicine” Thomas Sydenham and the great Dutch physician Hermann Boerhaave, both of whose teachings carried great weight in Hogarth’s time. I do not doubt that Hogarth prescribed the treatment for himself in his declining years. And, since everyone who writes about Marriage a La Mode is prone to express outlandish opinions about what is going on in the pictures, how about an interpretation of The Inspection which has the young viscount acquiring the young girl for his aged father? The “inspection” in the title of the picture – which causes so many problems with commentators - could be him inspecting her to see if she was suitable. The pills could be aphrodisiac pills. This still leaves open the question of what the old tab is doing with the scalpel and my surmise that it was an instrument of abortion is, on that account, the more credible. Hogarth had no love for the Jews and although he derided the Squander family for its philistine taste in furnishings and pictures I think that we can dismiss any idea that the young lord had gone to the surgery to be circumcised. (And see postscript, below).
In theory, when therapeutic Shumanitism was being medically administered as a life-prolonging treatment (and no doubt often in practice), intercourse did not occur. I recollect that there was a similar arrangement in place around about the eleventh and twelfth centuries. In what was known as Courtly Love young knights pledged their love for the high born wives of their feudal lords and to prove it lay with them naked in bed without making any kind of sexual advance. Wandering troubadours apparently provided a similar service. I have a note that the Royal Marines , as part of their community outreach, are always willing to make available their strapping young soldiers as ladies’ escorts and guarantee that there will be no hanky panky. We have, says a spokesman for the Corps, had no complaints.
The relationship between David and Jonathan which, whatever anyone wishes to maintain to the contrary, has a sexual element has not wanted artistic endorsement and if Hogarth had felt like making the point, via a picture on the wall, he could have based it either on the National Gallery’s David and Jonathan by Cima da Conegliano (with the bonus of Goliath’s Hagrid-like severed head and Jonathan’s nobly knees). Or, better yet, Donatello’s David. This bronze statue, the first to depict the nude male for a thousand years, shows David with his foot on Goliath’s helmeted, unattached head. According to the Encyclopedia of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and queer culture the feathered plum on the helmet rises erotically up the inside of the naked boy’s thigh toward his buttocks. This suggests, say the article, iconographically, that Goliath was killed by his desire for the beautiful boy. However, as a subject for a picture in the picture it would not have suited Hogarth’s purpose, as evidenced in La Toilette, of denigrating homosexuals and effete behaviour generally. A decapitation picture will always draw attention (as I said in a previous posting - the National Gallery loves them) but the detail on Hogarth’s painting is so small as to make one wonder whether the exercise served any purpose beyond reenforcing the interior décor’s role as a harbinger of future events. Like the music in the film Jaws. Similarly some of the other pictures-within-the-picture in The Marriage Settlement: Saint Sebastian, shot-through with arrows for being gay, the snake-haired Medusa, Cain slaying Abel, poor old Tityus having his liver pecked out in perpetuity by a vulture (“straightforwardly horrible” says my guru Judy Egerton), Saint Agnes having her throat cut in a brothel (to get round a Roman law which withheld capital punishment from virgins) and Saint Lawrence roasted to death over hot coals and usually seen, happy porker fashion, carrying a gridiron.
Saint Lawrence - by right of having been in charge of the Vatican library before his martydom - is the Patron Saint of librarians. Roman Catholic doctrine permits its Saints to take on more than one patronage and I think that the gridiron connection ought to qualify him for Patron Saint of American football players, where a vacancy exists. There would be the problem that you would have both teams invoking his assistance before and during matches - but they pray anyway – which is yet another instance of the triumph of hope over experience. How did University of Michigan feel about God’s love for his creatures great and small after their 34-32 defeat by Apallachian State? Where was God when the Baltimore Ravens Defence Co-ordinator called a timeout a nana-second before his team would otherwise have had the game against the almighty New England Patriots miraculously won?
Mention of Saint Lawrence and his Happy Porker gridiron brings back another memory of Death by Gridiron. It was a story that appeared in the Heavy Metal comic, brilliantly illustrated like most stories in Heavy Metal. This one is called The Hollow Planet and by the Brothers Schuiten. Their speciality is parallel universes that are bizarre but have an uncanny architectural and engineering logic about them. We are in Zara which is one of the worlds of a system known as the Hollow Grounds. Each world has its own unique characteristic. Zara is two worlds in one in which a race of women cling to the surface of a non-moving sphere while across a great chasm an outer sphere continually turns. The women need men only for the purpose of procreation and are delighted with the arrival of a raiding party from a more advanced civilisation - who see the women as a soft target - which gives the Zara ladies the opportunity to acquire new inseminators.
The women have adapted to life in a vertical plane on Zara by imitating spider like insects who spin webs and build nests. In the manner of comic art, however, they are well endowed in all the departments that men on Planet Earth find sexually irresistible and are not constrained by notions of modesty. They are bright, too, and using their territorial savvy it is a simple matter for them to capture the men who have invaded their world thereby dashing their hopes of a pleasant orgy of rape and murder.
The story is told through the eyes of Nelle, a native of Zara, and Olivia who has come from another world somewhat like our own. For the benefit of Nelle and the other girls Olivia mentally projects images of life on her planet which show men with what seem to Nelle and her friends to be vine like objects hanging from their stomachs but which are, in reality, penises. The Zara girls are amazed when Olivia goes on to project images showing them what the “vines” are used for. “It must be wonderful to be vined by one of those,” says one of the girls, wistfully - never dreaming that her wish will soon be realised.
The elders decide that the captured men will not be used up all at once but made to last as long as possible. They start with the leader of the group. Olivia is shocked to see girls siting astride him on an iron rack shaped like a gridiron and having sex with him in the centre of a pod shaped amphitheatre with all the other girls looking down from benches around the steep sides. YES!! screams the girl at the head of the line in the moment of orgasm. “In my world,” says Olivia, “we have intercourse in a very discreet fashion.”
Meanwhile the man’s companions remain strung-up in the rafters awaiting their turn. Nelle explains to Olivia that in order to bring about a perfect symbiosis between their way of life and their planet they have had to adopt all the customs of the insects - one of which is to spin a web to capture a male. Olivia, who knows what the insects do to the males during intercourse, says “You can’t really be saying that you copy all their behaviours?” “Of course we do!” replies Nelle. “Otherwise we would not achieve the symbiotic balance we are looking for.”
(”Much Later…”) the story reaches its grisly climax. The man is on the grid being barbecued over a flaming fire and the Zara girls are savouring the aroma and licking their lips in anticipation of the meal to come. This leaves on the reader’s mind a lingering uncertainty. Does the next man on the iron grid, knowing the fate that awaits him, with a voluptious lass straddling his loins get an erection? Or not?
We are now into female-on-male rape, a subject that deserves a posting all on its own and will get one in due course. Art is not without examples of such role reversal: The stories of Selene and Endymion and of Aurora and Cephalus are both featured in the Ten Sexiest Moments in Mythology. Under today’s definition of informed consent Judith and Holofernes is arguably another such case. It is one of two pictures within the Marriage Settlement not yet discussed. The second picture-within-a-picture not previously mentioned is on the ceiling and only partly in view. It is Pharoah drowning in the Red Sea. Too boring to dwell on. If Hogarth had wanted an Egyptian story he would have done better to have chosen Joseph and Potiphar’s Wife in which Joseph, being jumped on by Mrs P, is a victim of female-on-male attempted rape. Both Judith and Potiphar’s wife have to be strongly fancied to make it into the Bible’s top erotic ten. The story of the Jewish heroine Judith and her encounter with the Captain of the enemy host Holofernes, in which Judith came off best, will be the subject of my next Horrible Hogarth posting.
Postscript. While this posting was in draft I came across the web site of a seller of fine prints whose spin on Hogarth’s The Inspection was that he was asking the doctor to tell him which of the two females depicted had given him syphilis! Could it be that print sellers have to have the same ingenious descriptive abilities for which estate agents are famous?





































