Hogarth Lane, Great West Road
Chiswick W4
2QN
Wednesday 27 January 2016
Hogarth's House opens at 12.00, which was fine by us as it is a long way west for both of us.. So Linda and I met at Turnham Green and paused for rather a good sandwich before our walk to the House. A promising brown sign by the tube station proved to be the only hint until we were pretty well there, but Linda had brought a map so we were fine.
Having seen some original paintings last week, we were keen to visit the artist's country home. Not that it's much of a country retreat now, with the great West Road roaring past, but the house contained a couple of pictures of views over rolling cornfields, as well as a map from around the time of the Hogarths' residence.

Being made Serjeant Painter to George II probably also helped!
We learned about his wife, and the two sisters who were a key part of his life, though Anne died before the move to Chiswick.

Throughout the house there was information about the other residents and the history of the House. The top floor is not open to visitors, but we were told that it had suffered bomb damage during the Second World War
The last room is rather different: During the nineteenth century, Thomas Layton lived in Brentford, and was a collector. I should really put the word in capitals since, by his death, he had collected over 22,000 books. Some of his library, after a firm culling by the Borough's librarians, is now here, and is amazing. He seems to have had broad interests, to put it mildly. We saw The English Housewife's Household Physick, with treatments for many common and less common ailments; a 1631 edition of Foxe's Acts and Monuments, the Book of Martyrs which so shaped the Protestant view of the Catholic Church; a book about world-wide body adornments, from piercing to tattooing; a 1668 verse version of Aesop's Fables, and many others.
Returning through what had been the Hogarths' kitchen, with its trapdoor to the cellar, we paused briefly to admire the copy of the painting of Hogarth's servants (we have seen the original, which is in Tate Britain). We also smiled wryly at Martin Rowson's depiction of the roundabout that has been given Hogarth's name. All in all, we had spent a very pleasant hour in this cosy and interesting home.
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