Saturday, February 27, 2010

Sale at Tattersals

"paint what really interests you and look around and see the beauty of everyday things" - Sickert to Bevan
Not sure where I first saw his work online but enjoy his use of line and color and his compositions depicting the end of an era. Even while he working at his easel on these horse paintings, beneath the windows of his studio, the horse was giving way to the auto and the markets and fairs painted by so many artists in the past were disappearing.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Belle and the Blacksmith

An artist chooses his subjects: that is the way he praises. - Friedrich Nietzsche
Will amend something I said in the last post: it is entirely possible that the an animal shown was not a favorite! The Belle in this painting was an ex-race horse/broodmare that my husband wanted to play polo. Temperamentally these two were not a match and Belle went off to become coddled by a little girl. This is not an elaborate composition, I wanted to keep the tone subdued, it is a quiet moment that could happen around any stable, any where.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Portrait of Frederick Samuel Audeoud Fazy

He is well in with all the grooms, horse dealers, horse fanciers and all these people look upon him as a real expert” –AW Topffer
One of the things I admire most about Agasse's paintings are these more introspective portraits of his patrons with their favorite animals at the time placed in a space, a landscape that undoubtedly meant much to the person. It is a candid view to which we are perhaps a bit jaded from familiarity with cameras but perhaps seemed more intimate and fresh than a more formal mounted pose to his contemporaries.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

The Huntsman

Art is not what you see, but what you make others see - Degas
Of course I looked to the painting of Ned on the grey tick for this painting of a huntsman I did whip for. For several years I was happy to have this hanging over the mantle in a few of our houses. It sold a few years ago and remains one of my favorite paintings that I have done.



Saturday, February 20, 2010

Ned Osbourne on the Grey Tick

What are pictures for? To fill a man's soul with admiration and sheer joy, not to bewilder and daze him - Sir Alfred James Munnings

Years ago friends sent me a card with this image on it which I loved. I had seen Munnings work before and or course am swept away by his work, his horses, his figures, his landscapes, his ability to capture the mood of horse sports.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Sketch of a Bay Horse

One of the uncontestable masters of our epoch, all of us will be forgotten, but Meissonier will be remembered.-Eugène Delacroix, Painter and Friend of Meissonier
Another one of my icons of painting horses. He was known for his paintings of war, Napoleon's in fact, but is his sketches that I find incredible. I just found this image this evening, and love the way he handled paint, used the wood panel and so new the anatomy of a moving horse.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

WhistleJacket

Stubbs gave animals “the beauty, strength, and dignity ordinarily reserved for the human figure” - Frick catalogue
This is a splendid portrait, which hung at the Walters in Baltimore for a special exhibit a few years ago. Seeing so many of his works all in one place was a treat. I was very pleased to be able to stand in front of it, gazing up at this wonderful painting, recognizable to most anyone who loves horses. It's size is almost overwhelming, even in the fairly large gallery where I saw it hanging. This was painted in 1762 when Stubbs was 38 and leaving the horse on the plain background a bold choice away from the more typical views including real estate dear to the patron. Actually Stubbs was great at that, too.

Whistlejacket was the grandson of the Godolphin Arabian through his top line and the Byerly Turk on the bottom. He had a fine racing career and no doubt, also in the breeding shed.