
Capriccio with the Campidoglio is a c. 1742 oil on canvas painting by Bernardo Bellotto. It was acquired by count Stefano Sanvitale di Parma in 1835 and then exhibited in the Galleria nazionale di Parma, where it now hangs alongside another painting originally produced as its pendant.

Diana Bathing or Diana Getting out of her Bath is a painting of 1742 in oils on canvas by François Boucher, depicting the Roman goddess Diana. It was acquired in 1852 by the Louvre, where it now hangs.

The Graham Children is an oil painting completed by William Hogarth in 1742. It is a group portrait depicting the four children of Daniel Graham, apothecary to King George II. The youngest child had died by the time the painting was completed.

A Hare and a Leg of Lamb is a 1742 painting by French Rococo painter and engraver Jean-Baptiste Oudry.

Jesus and the Samaritan Woman is a 1742 painting by Jean-François de Troy of the Samaritan woman at the well. It is one of a series of six paintings by the artist for Pierre Guérin de Tencin and his archepiscopal palace at Lyon - the others were The Death of Lucretia, The Death of Cleopatra, The Judgement of Solomon, The Idolatry of Solomon and The Woman Caught in Adultery. It is now at the Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon.

The Judgement of Solomon is a 1742 painting of the Judgement of Solomon by Jean-François de Troy, produced in Rome as part of a commission from cardinal Pierre Guérin de Tencin for his archepiscopal palace in Lyon. The other paintings in the commission included Jesus and the Samaritan Woman. Both works are now in the Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon.

Taste in High Life is an oil-on-canvas painting from around 1742, by William Hogarth. The version seen on the right was engraved by Samuel Phillips in 1798, under commission from John Boydell for a posthumous edition of Hogarth's works, but Phillips's final, third state was not published until 1808.