eprintid: 8019 rev_number: 22 eprint_status: archive userid: 21 dir: disk0/00/00/80/19 datestamp: 2022-12-08 09:44:40 lastmod: 2022-12-13 10:44:12 status_changed: 2022-12-08 09:44:40 type: article metadata_visibility: show creators_name: Krysmanski, Bernd title: Does Hogarth depict Old Fritz truthfully with a crooked beak? : the pictures familiar to us from Pesne to Menzel don't show this subjects: ddc-750 divisions: i-9 cterms_swd: Hogarth, William cterms_swd: Friedrich cterms_swd: Bildnismalerei note: Zugang zum Beitrag in deutscher Sprache (ART-Dok und Verlagspublikation) siehe Links „Verwandte URLs“ abstract: Did you know that Frederick the Great had a sharply curved nose and thought himself as ugly as a scarecrow? You didn’t know? No wonder, because all historically transmitted, official portraits which are still depicted in history books today show the face of Old Fritz with a classically straightened nose and also in a highly embellished, idealised way. These portraits were more or less freely invented by contemporary artists, such as the Prussian court painter Antoine Pesne. In the 19th century, Adolph Menzel still portrayed Frederick II with a straightened nose, although he must have known that he had a crooked one. Only one artist showed the Prussian king as he really was, namely with an aquiline nose and playing the flute in front of a symbol of homosexuality: the Englishman William Hogarth in a painting completed in 1744, which is now on display in the National Gallery, London, and which was widely disseminated in the engraving by Simon François Ravenet after Hogarth. date: 2022 id_scheme: DOI id_number: 10.11588/artdok.00008019 ppn_swb: 1826871659 own_urn: urn:nbn:de:bsz:16-artdok-80193 language: eng vgwort_code: 8ac0dab2b30c413f86c22b52009480fb bibsort: KRYSMANSKIDOESHOGART2022 full_text_status: public related_url_url: http://doi.org/10.11588/artdok.00006399 related_url_url: http://doi.org/10.11588/arthistoricum.493.c6566 related_url_type: otherversion related_url_type: otherversion themen: T14 oa_type: gold laender: LDe laender: LGb citation: Krysmanski, Bernd (2022) Does Hogarth depict Old Fritz truthfully with a crooked beak? : the pictures familiar to us from Pesne to Menzel don't show this. document_url: https://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/artdok/8019/1/Krysmanski_Bernd_Does_Hogarth_Depict_Old_Fritz_2022.pdf