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George Stubbs

George Stubbs ARA (25 August 1724 – 10 July 1806) was an English painter, best known for his paintings of horses. Self-trained, Stubbs learnt his skills independently from other great artists of the 18th century such as Reynolds and Gainsborough. Stubbs' output includes history paintings, but his greatest skill was in painting animals, perhaps influenced by his love and study of anatomy. His series of paintings on the theme of a lion attacking a horse are early and significant examples of the Romantic movement that emerged in the late 18th century. He enjoyed royal patronage. His painting, Whistlejacket hangs in the National Gallery, London.

George Stubbs
A self-portrait by George Stubbs
Born(1724-08-25)25 August 1724
Died10 July 1806(1806-07-10) (aged 81)
NationalityEnglish
OccupationPainter
WorksA Lion Attacking a Horse, Whistlejacket
MovementRomanticism

Biography Edit

 
The Milbanke and Melbourne Families (ca. 1769), oil on canvas, 97 x 149 cm., National Gallery

Stubbs was born in Liverpool, the son of a currier, or leather-dresser, John Stubbs, and his wife Mary.[1] Information on his life until the age of 35 or so is sparse, relying almost entirely on notes made by Ozias Humphry, a fellow artist and friend; Humphry's informal memoir, which was not intended for publication, was based on a series of private conversations he had with Stubbs around 1794, when Stubbs was 70 years old, and Humphry 52.[1]

Stubbs worked at his father's trade until the age of 15 or 16, at which point he told his father that he wished to become a painter.[2][3] While initially resistant, Stubbs's father (who died not long after in 1741), eventually acquiesced in his son's choice of a career path, on the condition that he could find an appropriate mentor.[3] Stubbs subsequently approached the Lancashire painter and engraver Hamlet Winstanley, and was briefly engaged by him in a sort of apprenticeship relationship, probably not more than several weeks in duration.[4] Having initially demonstrated his abilities and agreed to do some copying work, Stubbs had access to and opportunity to study the collection at Knowsley Hall near Liverpool, the estate where Winstanley was then residing; however, he soon left when he came into conflict with the older artist over exactly which pictures he could work on copying.[4]

Thereafter as an artist he was self-taught. He had had a passion for anatomy from his childhood,[2] and in or around 1744, he moved to York, in the North of England, to pursue his ambition to study the subject under experts.[5] In York, from 1745 to 1753, he worked as a portrait painter, and studied human anatomy under the surgeon Charles Atkinson, at York County Hospital,[6] One of his earliest surviving works is a set of illustrations for a textbook on midwifery by John Burton, Essay towards a Complete New System of Midwifery, published in 1751.[6]

In 1754 Stubbs visited Italy.[7] Forty years later he told Ozias Humphry that his motive for going to Italy was, "to convince himself that nature was and is always superior to art whether Greek or Roman, and having renewed this conviction he immediately resolved upon returning home". In 1756 he rented a farmhouse in the village of Horkstow, Lincolnshire, and spent 18 months dissecting horses, assisted by his common-law wife, Mary Spencer.[8] He moved to London in about 1759 and in 1766 published The anatomy of the Horse. The original drawings are now in the collection of the Royal Academy.

 
Whistlejacket (ca. 1762), oil on canvas, 292 x 246.4 cm., National Gallery

Even before his book was published, Stubbs's drawings were seen by leading aristocratic patrons, who recognised that his work was more accurate than that of earlier horse painters such as James Seymour, Peter Tillemans and John Wootton. In 1759 the 3rd Duke of Richmond commissioned three large pictures from him, and his career was soon secure. By 1763 he had produced works for several more dukes and other lords and was able to buy a house in Marylebone, a fashionable part of London, where he lived for the rest of his life.

A famous work, Whistlejacket, a painting of the thoroughbred race horse rising on his hind legs, commissioned by the 2nd Marquess of Rockingham, is now in the National Gallery in London. This and two other paintings carried out for Rockingham break with convention in having plain backgrounds. Throughout the 1760s he produced a wide range of individual and group portraits of horses, sometimes accompanied by hounds. He often painted horses with their grooms, whom he always painted as individuals. Meanwhile, he also continued to accept commissions for portraits of people, including some group portraits. From 1761 to 1776 he exhibited at the Society of Artists of Great Britain, but in 1775 he switched his allegiance to the recently founded but already more prestigious Royal Academy of Arts.

Stubbs also painted more exotic animals including lions, tigers, giraffes, monkeys, and rhinoceroses, which he was able to observe in private menageries.

 
Painting of a kangaroo, 1772

His painting of a kangaroo was the first glimpse of this animal for many 18th-century Britons.[9] He became preoccupied with the theme of a wild horse threatened by a lion and produced several variations on this theme. These and other works became well known at the time through engravings of Stubbs's work, which appeared in increasing numbers in the 1770s and 1780s.

Stubbs also painted historical pictures, but these are much less well regarded. From the late 1760s he produced some work on enamel. In the 1770s Josiah Wedgwood developed a new and larger type of enamel panel at Stubbs's request. Stubbs hoped to achieve commercial success with his paintings in enamel, but the venture left him in debt.[10] Also in the 1770s he painted single portraits of dogs for the first time, while also receiving an increasing number of commissions to paint hunts with their packs of hounds. He remained active into his old age. In the 1780s he produced a pastoral series called Haymakers and Reapers, and in the early 1790s he enjoyed the patronage of the Prince of Wales, whom he painted on horseback in 1791. His last project, begun in 1795, was A comparative anatomical exposition of the structure of the human body with that of a tiger and a common fowl, fifteen engravings from which appeared between 1804 and 1806. The project was left unfinished upon Stubbs's death. He died at the age of 81 on 10 July 1806 at the home he had lived in since 1763, No.24 Somerset Street, near Portman Square, Marylebone, central London. He was buried on 18 July in the graveyard of St Marylebone Parish Church, now a garden of rest.

Stubbs's son George Townly Stubbs was an engraver and printmaker.

A lion attacking a horse Edit

 
Horse Attacked by a Lion (1768-69), oil on panel, 25.7 x 29.5 cm., Yale Center for British Art

Stubbs began an informal series of works on the subject of a lion attacking a horse around 1762 or 1763, and he continued to explore and reinterpret the theme in at least 17 images over a period of about 30 years. These paintings are among his most celebrated and influential works.[11]: 90 p.  One art historian wrote "The appearance of the monumental picture now in the Mellon Collection [A Lion Attacking a Horse, ca. 1762-63] must be treated as one of the outstanding events in English eighteenth-century art for within the context of painting at that date its singularity as well as its inherent originality is most striking. Not since the publication of Hogarth's Harlot's Progress thirty years before had there occurred such an innovation."[12]: 86 p.  The iconic paintings are in fact among the earliest manifestations of Romanticism in painting, predating the work of more familiar masters of the movement such as William Blake, Eugène Delacroix, Francisco Goya, William Turner, and Théodore Géricault, who was known to be an admirer of both horses, and the work of George Stubbs.[13]: 585 p. [14]: 109 p.  Jean Clay, professor of art history at the University of Paris, perceptively observed that not only does the energy and terror of the animals foreshadow the spirit of romanticism but, as Stubbs's series progressed, the horror seemed to diffuse and expand throughout the whole of the landscape: "an image that would fertilize the Romantic imagination and come to full flower a half-century later."[15]: 150 p. 

 
Lion Seizing a Horse, restored Roman copy of Hellenistic original, Palazzo dei Conservatori

The series are mostly oil paintings on canvas, but also include examples of enamel on copper, original engravings, and even a relief model in Wedgwood clay. The white horse was painted from one of the Kings Horses in the Mews, secured for the artist by an architect friend, Mr. Payne. Stubbs was able to study a lion in life that was in the menagerie of Lord Shellburne at Hounslow Heath.[11]: 90 p.  The earliest work is a life-size painting of A Lion Attacking a Horse (ca. 1762-63), which was commissioned by the 2nd Marquess of Rockingham and now in the Yale Center for British Art. Art historian Basil Taylor postulated the theme was treated in three distinct episodes: Episode A, a lion prowling at some distance from a terrified horse; Episode B, a lion close to a terrified horse; Episode C a lion on the horse's back biting its flank. Interestingly, Stubbs first painted "Episode C", and it was not until later that he was inspired to go back and paint the moments leading up to the climatic event.[12]: 81–82 p. 

An anecdote regarding the origin of the subject matter emerged soon after the artist death, originally published in The Sporting Magazine in 1808, and reiterate often for well over a century and a half. Art historian H. W. Janson repeated it "On a visit to North Africa, he had seen a horse killed by a lion; this experience haunted his imagination, and from it he developed a new type of animal picture full of Romantic feeling for the grandeur and violence of nature."[13]: 567 p.  However, research published in 1965 produced a rather persuasive argument that Stubbs in fact never traveled to Africa, and the actual inspiration for the painting was an antique sculpture he had seen in a well documented 1754 stay in Rome. The sculpture, Lion Seizing a Horse, in the Palazzo dei Conservatori, Rome, is a restored Roman copy of a Hellenistic original. It has been a celebrated work since the Renaissance, admired by Michelangelo, included in guidebooks of Stubbs's day, and copied any number of times by various artist in marble, bronze, and prints, including an 18th century marble copy in the collection of Stubbs's patron Henry Blundell, who also acquired one of the paintings by Stubbs.[11]: 90–91 p. [12]

Legacy Edit

 
Two Gentlemen Going a Shooting, with a View of Creswell Crags (ca. 1767), oil on canvas, 54 x 64 cm., National Museum in Warsaw

Stubbs remained a secondary figure in British art until the mid-twentieth century. The art historian Basil Taylor and art collector Paul Mellon both championed Stubbs's work. Stubbs's Pumpkin with a Stable-lad was the first painting that Mellon bought in 1936.[16] Basil Taylor was commissioned in 1955 by Pelican Press to write the book Animal Painting in England – From Barlow to Landseer, which included a large segment on Stubbs. In 1959 Mellon and Taylor first met and bonded over their appreciation of Stubbs. This led Mellon to create the Paul Mellon Foundation for British Art (the predecessor of the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art) with Taylor as the director.[17] Mellon eventually amassed the largest collection of Stubbs paintings in the world which would become a part of his larger collection of British art that would become the Yale Center for British Art in Connecticut, USA.[18] In 1971, Taylor published the seminal catalogue, Stubbs.[19]

The record price for a Stubbs painting was set by the sale at auction of Gimcrack on Newmarket Heath, with a Trainer, a Stable-Lad, and a Jockey (1765) at Christie's in London in July 2011 for £22.4 million. It was sold by The Woolavington Collection of sporting art at Cottesbrooke Hall, Northamptonshire; the buyer was unidentified. [20]

The Royal Collection of the British royal family holds 16 paintings by Stubbs.[21]

Two paintings by Stubbs were bought by the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, London after a public appeal to raise the £1.5 million required.[22] The two paintings, The Kongouro from New Holland and Portrait of a Large Dog were both painted in 1772.[22] Depicting a kangaroo and a dingo respectively, they are the first depictions of Australian animals in Western art.[22]

His work was shown in a retrospective exhibition at the Whitechapel Gallery in London, 27 February – 7 April 1957.[23] The Tate Britain, in conjunction with the Yale Center for British Art, organized the largest exhibition ever devoted to Stubbs (up to that time) in 1984, which travelled to New Haven in 1985.[11]: 7 p. 

Gallery Edit

Horses Edit

Dogs Edit

Exotic wildlife Edit

List of selected artworks Edit

 
Self-Portrait (ca. 1759) oil on copper, 14 x 10.8 cm., Yale Center for British Art
 
Sir John Nelthorpe, 6th Baronet (ca. 1765-75), oil on canvas, 127 x 101.5 cm. private collection
 
Richard Wedgewood (ca. 1765-75), oil on canvas, Wedgewood Museum
 
The Fall of Phaëton (1777), oil on canvas, 96.5 x 122 cm., National Trust
In the Yale Center for British Art
  • Self-Portrait (1759)
  • The Countess of Coningsby in the Costume of the Charlton Hunt (c. 1760)
  • Lustre, held by a Groom (c. 1762)
  • Newmarket Heath, with the King's stables rubbing house at the finish of the Beacon Course (c. 1765)
  • Turf, with Jockey up, at Newmarket (c. 1766)
  • A Lion Attacking a Horse (1762)
  • Two Gentlemen Going a Shooting, with a View of Creswell Crags, Taken on the Spot (c. 1767)
  • Two Gentlemen Going a Shooting (c. 1768)
  • Two Gentlemen Shooting (c. 1769)
  • A Repose after Shooting (1770)
  • Zebra (exhibited 1763)
  • Pumpkin with a Stable-lad (c. 1774)
  • Sleeping Leopard (1777)
  • Brown and White Norfolk or Water Spanield (c. 1778)
  • Greenland Falcon (c. 1780)
  • Phaeton with a Pair of Cream Ponies and a Stable-Lad (between 1780–1784)
  • Labourers (1781)
  • Bulls Fighting (c. 1786)
  • The Farmer's Wife and the Raven (1786)
  • Reapers (1795)
  • Freeman, the Earl of Clarendon's gamekeeper, with a dying doe and hound (1800)
  • A Comparative Anatomical Exposition of the Human Body with that of a Tiger and a Common Fowl (1795–1806)

In the Tate Gallery

  • A Grey Hunter with Groom and a Greyhound at Creswell Crags (c.1762)
  • Horse Devoured by a Lion (exhibited 1763)
  • Horse Frightened by a Lion (exhibited 1763)
  • Mares and Foals in a River Landscape (c.1763‑1768)
  • Newmarket Heath, with a Rubbing-Down House (c.1765)
  • Otho, with John Larkin up (1768)
  • Horse Attacked by a Lion (1769)
  • Mother and Child (1774)
  • Horse in the Shade of a Wood (1780)
  • Leopards at Play (1780)
  • Portrait of a Young Gentleman Out Shooting (1781)
  • Haymakers (1785)
  • Reapers (1785)
  • Bay Hunter by a Lake (1787)
  • A Foxhound published (1788)
  • A Foxhound Viewed from Behind published (1788)
  • A Horse Attacked by a Lion (A Lion Devouring a Horse) (published 1788)
  • A Lion Resting on a Rock published (1788)
In the Royal Collection
  • "Pumpkin" with William South Up (c.1770)
  • Sir Sidney Medows (1778)
  • John Christian Santhague (1782)
  • A Rough Dog (1790)
  • A Bay Horse with a Groom (1791)
  • John Gascoigne with a Bay Horse (1791)
  • Portrait of a Gentleman (1791)
  • Fino and Tiny (1791)
  • Baronet with Samuel Chifney (1791)
  • A Red Deer, a Buck and a Doe (1792)
  • Soldiers of the 10th Light Dragoons (1793)
  • William Anderson with two Saddle-Horses (1793)
  • A Grey Horse (1793)
  • A Grey Horse (1793)
  • Laetitia, Lady Lade (1793)
  • The Prince of Wales's Phaeton (1793)
In the National Museums Liverpool
  • A Lion and Tiger (1779)
  • A Monkey (1799)
  • 'Gnawpost' and Two Other Colts (c.1793)
  • Haycarting (1795)
  • Haymakers (1794)
  • Horse and Lioness (1775–1800)
  • Horse Frightened by a Lion
  • James Stanley (1755)
  • 'Molly Long-Legs' with Her Jockey
  • Self Portrait on a White Hunter (1782)
  • The Farmer's Wife and the Raven (1782)
In the National Gallery, London
  • Whistlejacket (1762)
  • A Gentleman driving a Lady in a Phaeton (1787)
  • The Milbanke and Melbourne Families (c.1769)
In the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich
Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery, University of Glasgow
  • The Moose (1770)
  • The Nilgai (1769)
  • A Blackbuck (1770–1780)
Hunterian Museum (London)
  • The Yak of Tartary (1791)
  • Rhinoceros (1790–1792)
  • Drill and Albino Baboon (before 1789)
British Sporting Art Trust
  • A Pointer (a pair)
  • A Spaniel (a pair)
  • Lord Clanbrassil with Hunter Mowbrary (1769)
  • Fighting Stallions (1791)
National Trust
National Gallery of Art, Washington
  • Captain Samuel Sharpe Pocklington with His Wife, Pleasance, and possibly His Sister, Frances (1769)
  • White Poodle in a Punt (c. 1780)
Victoria and Albert Museum
  • Goose with Outspread Wings
  • Lions and a Lioness with a Rocky Background (1776)
  • The Portland Collection
  • The 3rd Duke of Portland on horseback at Welbeck Abbey
  • William Henry Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland and his younger brother Lord Edward

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Egerton, Judy (2007). George Stubbs, Painter: Catalogue raisonné. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300125092. p. 10.
  2. ^ a b Monkhouse, William Cosmo (1898). "Stubbs, George (1724–1806)". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 55. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 113–116.
  3. ^ a b Egerton (2007), p. 12.
  4. ^ a b Egerton (2007), p. 13.
  5. ^ Egerton (2007), p. 16.
  6. ^ a b "Chronology" (p. 12–13), in: George Stubbs, 1724–1806. Tate Gallery Publications; Yale Center for British Art. Salem, NH: Salem House, 1985. ISBN 0881620386. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Tate Gallery, London, 17 October 1984 – 6 January1985, and at the Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Conn., 13 February – 7 April 1985; paintings for the exhibition selected by Judy Egerton, Assistant Keeper of the British Collection (Foreword).
  7. ^ The Great Artists: part 50: Stubbs. 1985. London: Marshall Cavendish Ltd. p. 1571.
  8. ^ The Great Artists: part 50: Stubbs. 1985. London: Marshall Cavendish Ltd. p. 1572.
  9. ^ The i newspaper. 21 June 2013. p. 2.[title missing]
  10. ^ The Great Artists: part 50: Stubbs. 1985. London: Marshall Cavendish Ltd. p. 1574.
  11. ^ a b c d Egerton, Judy. 1984. George Stubbs 1724-1806. Tate Gallery Publications. Milbank, London. 248 pp. ISBN 0-946590-12-5
  12. ^ a b c Taylor, Basil. 1965. George Stubbs: "The Lion and the Horse" Theme. The Burlington Magazine, 107 (743): 81-87
  13. ^ a b Janson, H. W. 1977. History of Art: A Survey of the Major Visual Arts from the Dawn of History to the Present Day (2nd, edition). Harry N. Abrams, Inc., publishers. New York, 767 pp. ISBN 0-8109-1052-7
  14. ^ Claudon, Francis. 1980. The Concise Encyclopedia of Romanticism. Chartwell Books, Inc. Secaucus, New Jersey. 304 pp. ISBN 0-89009-707-0
  15. ^ Clay, Jean. 1980. Roamanticism. Chartwell Books, Inc. Secaucus, New Jersey. 320 pp. ISBN 0-89009-588-4
  16. ^ Angus Trumble (January 2007). "Collection Record: Pumpkin with a Stable-lad". Yale Center for British Art.
  17. ^ . Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art. Archived from the original on 29 April 2018. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  18. ^ . Yale Center for British Art. Archived from the original on 17 September 2019. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  19. ^ Basil, Taylor (1971). Stubbs. London: Phaidon Press. ISBN 0-714-81498-9.
  20. ^ Scott Reyburn (6 July 2011). "Stubbs, Gainsborough Records Boost $80 Million Auction". Bloomberg.
  21. ^ "Search results: George Stubbs (1724–1806)". Royal Collection.
  22. ^ a b c "George Stubbs' kangaroo and dingo paintings to stay in UK". BBC News Online. 6 November 2013. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  23. ^ Whitechapel Gallery

Further reading Edit

  • Boyle, Frederick & Mayer, Joseph. Memoirs of Thomas Dodd, William Upcott, and George Stubbs, R.A. (Liverpool: D. Marples, 1879).
  • Egerton, Judy. George Stubbs, 1724–1806 (Tate Gallery Publications, 1984).
  • Egerton, Judy. George Stubbs, Painter. Catalogue Raisonné (New Haven and London: Published for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art by Yale University Press, 2007) ISBN 978-0-300-12509-2
  • Rump, Gerhard C. Pferde und Jagdbilder in der englischen Kunst. Studien zu George Stubbs und dem Genre der "Sporting Art" von 1650–1830 (Olms: Hildesheim, New York, 1983) ISBN 3-487-07425-7
  • Gilbey, Walter. Animal Painters of England from the Year 1650, Volume 2 (Vinton, 1900) p. 192 ff.
  • Morrison, Venetia. Art of George Stubbs (Headline Book Pub., 1989).
  • Myrone, Martin. George Stubbs (British Artists series) (Tate Publishing, 2002).
  • Taylor, Basil. Stubbs (London: Phaidon Prees, 1971) ISBN 0-714-81498-9

External links Edit

  • 71 artworks by or after George Stubbs at the Art UK site
  • George Stubbs online (Artcyclopedia)
  • George Stubbs – a celebration (Walker Art Gallery)
  • George Stubbs (Encyclopedia of Irish and World Art)
  • (Mezzo Mundo Fine Art)
  • Paintings by George Stubbs (Tate Gallery)
  • Profile on Royal Academy of Arts Collections
  • Selected images from Anatomy of the Horse From The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Digital Library
  • Judy Egerton archive

george, stubbs, august, 1724, july, 1806, english, painter, best, known, paintings, horses, self, trained, stubbs, learnt, skills, independently, from, other, great, artists, 18th, century, such, reynolds, gainsborough, stubbs, output, includes, history, paint. George Stubbs ARA 25 August 1724 10 July 1806 was an English painter best known for his paintings of horses Self trained Stubbs learnt his skills independently from other great artists of the 18th century such as Reynolds and Gainsborough Stubbs output includes history paintings but his greatest skill was in painting animals perhaps influenced by his love and study of anatomy His series of paintings on the theme of a lion attacking a horse are early and significant examples of the Romantic movement that emerged in the late 18th century He enjoyed royal patronage His painting Whistlejacket hangs in the National Gallery London George StubbsA self portrait by George StubbsBorn 1724 08 25 25 August 1724Liverpool Lancashire England Kingdom of Great BritainDied10 July 1806 1806 07 10 aged 81 Marylebone Middlesex England United Kingdom of Great Britain and IrelandNationalityEnglishOccupationPainterWorksA Lion Attacking a Horse WhistlejacketMovementRomanticism Contents 1 Biography 2 A lion attacking a horse 3 Legacy 4 Gallery 4 1 Horses 4 2 Dogs 4 3 Exotic wildlife 5 List of selected artworks 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography Edit nbsp The Milbanke and Melbourne Families ca 1769 oil on canvas 97 x 149 cm National GalleryStubbs was born in Liverpool the son of a currier or leather dresser John Stubbs and his wife Mary 1 Information on his life until the age of 35 or so is sparse relying almost entirely on notes made by Ozias Humphry a fellow artist and friend Humphry s informal memoir which was not intended for publication was based on a series of private conversations he had with Stubbs around 1794 when Stubbs was 70 years old and Humphry 52 1 Stubbs worked at his father s trade until the age of 15 or 16 at which point he told his father that he wished to become a painter 2 3 While initially resistant Stubbs s father who died not long after in 1741 eventually acquiesced in his son s choice of a career path on the condition that he could find an appropriate mentor 3 Stubbs subsequently approached the Lancashire painter and engraver Hamlet Winstanley and was briefly engaged by him in a sort of apprenticeship relationship probably not more than several weeks in duration 4 Having initially demonstrated his abilities and agreed to do some copying work Stubbs had access to and opportunity to study the collection at Knowsley Hall near Liverpool the estate where Winstanley was then residing however he soon left when he came into conflict with the older artist over exactly which pictures he could work on copying 4 Thereafter as an artist he was self taught He had had a passion for anatomy from his childhood 2 and in or around 1744 he moved to York in the North of England to pursue his ambition to study the subject under experts 5 In York from 1745 to 1753 he worked as a portrait painter and studied human anatomy under the surgeon Charles Atkinson at York County Hospital 6 One of his earliest surviving works is a set of illustrations for a textbook on midwifery by John Burton Essay towards a Complete New System of Midwifery published in 1751 6 In 1754 Stubbs visited Italy 7 Forty years later he told Ozias Humphry that his motive for going to Italy was to convince himself that nature was and is always superior to art whether Greek or Roman and having renewed this conviction he immediately resolved upon returning home In 1756 he rented a farmhouse in the village of Horkstow Lincolnshire and spent 18 months dissecting horses assisted by his common law wife Mary Spencer 8 He moved to London in about 1759 and in 1766 published The anatomy of the Horse The original drawings are now in the collection of the Royal Academy nbsp Whistlejacket ca 1762 oil on canvas 292 x 246 4 cm National GalleryEven before his book was published Stubbs s drawings were seen by leading aristocratic patrons who recognised that his work was more accurate than that of earlier horse painters such as James Seymour Peter Tillemans and John Wootton In 1759 the 3rd Duke of Richmond commissioned three large pictures from him and his career was soon secure By 1763 he had produced works for several more dukes and other lords and was able to buy a house in Marylebone a fashionable part of London where he lived for the rest of his life A famous work Whistlejacket a painting of the thoroughbred race horse rising on his hind legs commissioned by the 2nd Marquess of Rockingham is now in the National Gallery in London This and two other paintings carried out for Rockingham break with convention in having plain backgrounds Throughout the 1760s he produced a wide range of individual and group portraits of horses sometimes accompanied by hounds He often painted horses with their grooms whom he always painted as individuals Meanwhile he also continued to accept commissions for portraits of people including some group portraits From 1761 to 1776 he exhibited at the Society of Artists of Great Britain but in 1775 he switched his allegiance to the recently founded but already more prestigious Royal Academy of Arts Stubbs also painted more exotic animals including lions tigers giraffes monkeys and rhinoceroses which he was able to observe in private menageries nbsp Painting of a kangaroo 1772His painting of a kangaroo was the first glimpse of this animal for many 18th century Britons 9 He became preoccupied with the theme of a wild horse threatened by a lion and produced several variations on this theme These and other works became well known at the time through engravings of Stubbs s work which appeared in increasing numbers in the 1770s and 1780s Stubbs also painted historical pictures but these are much less well regarded From the late 1760s he produced some work on enamel In the 1770s Josiah Wedgwood developed a new and larger type of enamel panel at Stubbs s request Stubbs hoped to achieve commercial success with his paintings in enamel but the venture left him in debt 10 Also in the 1770s he painted single portraits of dogs for the first time while also receiving an increasing number of commissions to paint hunts with their packs of hounds He remained active into his old age In the 1780s he produced a pastoral series called Haymakers and Reapers and in the early 1790s he enjoyed the patronage of the Prince of Wales whom he painted on horseback in 1791 His last project begun in 1795 was A comparative anatomical exposition of the structure of the human body with that of a tiger and a common fowl fifteen engravings from which appeared between 1804 and 1806 The project was left unfinished upon Stubbs s death He died at the age of 81 on 10 July 1806 at the home he had lived in since 1763 No 24 Somerset Street near Portman Square Marylebone central London He was buried on 18 July in the graveyard of St Marylebone Parish Church now a garden of rest Stubbs s son George Townly Stubbs was an engraver and printmaker A lion attacking a horse Edit nbsp Horse Attacked by a Lion 1768 69 oil on panel 25 7 x 29 5 cm Yale Center for British ArtStubbs began an informal series of works on the subject of a lion attacking a horse around 1762 or 1763 and he continued to explore and reinterpret the theme in at least 17 images over a period of about 30 years These paintings are among his most celebrated and influential works 11 90 p One art historian wrote The appearance of the monumental picture now in the Mellon Collection A Lion Attacking a Horse ca 1762 63 must be treated as one of the outstanding events in English eighteenth century art for within the context of painting at that date its singularity as well as its inherent originality is most striking Not since the publication of Hogarth s Harlot s Progress thirty years before had there occurred such an innovation 12 86 p The iconic paintings are in fact among the earliest manifestations of Romanticism in painting predating the work of more familiar masters of the movement such as William Blake Eugene Delacroix Francisco Goya William Turner and Theodore Gericault who was known to be an admirer of both horses and the work of George Stubbs 13 585 p 14 109 p Jean Clay professor of art history at the University of Paris perceptively observed that not only does the energy and terror of the animals foreshadow the spirit of romanticism but as Stubbs s series progressed the horror seemed to diffuse and expand throughout the whole of the landscape an image that would fertilize the Romantic imagination and come to full flower a half century later 15 150 p nbsp Lion Seizing a Horse restored Roman copy of Hellenistic original Palazzo dei ConservatoriThe series are mostly oil paintings on canvas but also include examples of enamel on copper original engravings and even a relief model in Wedgwood clay The white horse was painted from one of the Kings Horses in the Mews secured for the artist by an architect friend Mr Payne Stubbs was able to study a lion in life that was in the menagerie of Lord Shellburne at Hounslow Heath 11 90 p The earliest work is a life size painting of A Lion Attacking a Horse ca 1762 63 which was commissioned by the 2nd Marquess of Rockingham and now in the Yale Center for British Art Art historian Basil Taylor postulated the theme was treated in three distinct episodes Episode A a lion prowling at some distance from a terrified horse Episode B a lion close to a terrified horse Episode C a lion on the horse s back biting its flank Interestingly Stubbs first painted Episode C and it was not until later that he was inspired to go back and paint the moments leading up to the climatic event 12 81 82 p An anecdote regarding the origin of the subject matter emerged soon after the artist death originally published in The Sporting Magazine in 1808 and reiterate often for well over a century and a half Art historian H W Janson repeated it On a visit to North Africa he had seen a horse killed by a lion this experience haunted his imagination and from it he developed a new type of animal picture full of Romantic feeling for the grandeur and violence of nature 13 567 p However research published in 1965 produced a rather persuasive argument that Stubbs in fact never traveled to Africa and the actual inspiration for the painting was an antique sculpture he had seen in a well documented 1754 stay in Rome The sculpture Lion Seizing a Horse in the Palazzo dei Conservatori Rome is a restored Roman copy of a Hellenistic original It has been a celebrated work since the Renaissance admired by Michelangelo included in guidebooks of Stubbs s day and copied any number of times by various artist in marble bronze and prints including an 18th century marble copy in the collection of Stubbs s patron Henry Blundell who also acquired one of the paintings by Stubbs 11 90 91 p 12 nbsp A Lion Attacking a Horse ca 1762 63 oil on canvas 243 8 x 332 7 cm Yale Center for British Art nbsp Horse Devoured by a Lion 1763 oil on canvas 69 2 x 103 5 cm Tate Britain nbsp Horse Frightened by a Lion ca 1763 1768 oil on canvas 70 5 x 104 1 cm Yale Center for British Art nbsp A Lion Attacking a Horse 1765 oil on canvas 69 x 100 1 cm National Gallery of Victoria nbsp A Lion Attacking a Horse 1770 oil on canvas 38 in x 49 1 2in Yale Center for British ArtLegacy Edit nbsp Two Gentlemen Going a Shooting with a View of Creswell Crags ca 1767 oil on canvas 54 x 64 cm National Museum in WarsawStubbs remained a secondary figure in British art until the mid twentieth century The art historian Basil Taylor and art collector Paul Mellon both championed Stubbs s work Stubbs s Pumpkin with a Stable lad was the first painting that Mellon bought in 1936 16 Basil Taylor was commissioned in 1955 by Pelican Press to write the book Animal Painting in England From Barlow to Landseer which included a large segment on Stubbs In 1959 Mellon and Taylor first met and bonded over their appreciation of Stubbs This led Mellon to create the Paul Mellon Foundation for British Art the predecessor of the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art with Taylor as the director 17 Mellon eventually amassed the largest collection of Stubbs paintings in the world which would become a part of his larger collection of British art that would become the Yale Center for British Art in Connecticut USA 18 In 1971 Taylor published the seminal catalogue Stubbs 19 The record price for a Stubbs painting was set by the sale at auction of Gimcrack on Newmarket Heath with a Trainer a Stable Lad and a Jockey 1765 at Christie s in London in July 2011 for 22 4 million It was sold by The Woolavington Collection of sporting art at Cottesbrooke Hall Northamptonshire the buyer was unidentified 20 The Royal Collection of the British royal family holds 16 paintings by Stubbs 21 Two paintings by Stubbs were bought by the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich London after a public appeal to raise the 1 5 million required 22 The two paintings The Kongouro from New Holland and Portrait of a Large Dog were both painted in 1772 22 Depicting a kangaroo and a dingo respectively they are the first depictions of Australian animals in Western art 22 His work was shown in a retrospective exhibition at the Whitechapel Gallery in London 27 February 7 April 1957 23 The Tate Britain in conjunction with the Yale Center for British Art organized the largest exhibition ever devoted to Stubbs up to that time in 1984 which travelled to New Haven in 1985 11 7 p Gallery Edit nbsp Racehorses Exercising at Goodwood 1759 60 oil on canvas 127 5 x 204 cm Goodwood House nbsp Joseph Smyth Esq Lieutenant of Whittlebury Forest Northamptonshire on a Dapple Grey Horse 1762 64 oil on canvas 64 2 x 76 8 cm Fitzwilliam Museum nbsp Hound Coursing a Stag ca 1762 oil on canvas 100 1 x 125 8 cm Philadelphia Museum of Art nbsp Cheetah and Stag with Two Indians ca 1765 oil on canvas 182 7 x 275 3 cm Manchester Art Gallery nbsp Captain Samuel Sharpe Pocklington with His Wife Pleasance and possibly His Sister Frances 1769 oil on canvas 100 2 x 126 6 cm National Gallery of Art nbsp Reapers 1785 oil on canvas 90 x 137 cm Tate Britain nbsp Haymakers 1785 oil on panel 89 5 x 132 5 cm Tate Britain nbsp Bulls Fighting 1786 oil on panel 61 6 x 82 6 cm Yale Center for British Art nbsp The Farmer s Wife and the Raven 1786 oil on millboard 67 3 x 97 8 cm Yale Center for British Art nbsp Soldiers of the 10th Light Dragoons 1793 oil on canvas 102 x 128 cm Royal Art CollectionHorses Edit nbsp Mares and Foals in a Landscape 1763 68 oil on canvas 102 x 162 cm Tate Britain nbsp The Third Duke of Dorset s Hunter with a Groom and a Dog 1768 oil on canvas 101 6 x 126 4 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp Horse in the Shade of a Wood 1780 76 2 x 59 7 cm Tate Britain National Gallery nbsp A Saddled Bay Hunter 1786 oil on panel 48 2 x 57 7 cm Denver Art Museum nbsp Hambletonian Rubbing Down 1800 oil on canvas 209 x 367 3 cm National Trust Mount StewartDogs Edit nbsp The Pointer ca 1766 oil on canvas 61 x 70 cm Neue Pinakothek nbsp Water Spaniel 1769 oil on canvas 90 2 x 116 8 cm Yale Center for British Art nbsp Brown and White Norfolk or Water Spaniel 1778 oil on panel 80 6 x 97 2 cm Yale Center for British Art nbsp White Poodle in a Punt ca 1780 oil on canvas 127 x 101 5 cm National Gallery of Art nbsp A Couple of Foxhounds 1792 oil on canvas 127 x 101 6 cm Tate Britain nbsp Black and White Spaniel Following a Scent 1793 oil on canvas 25 x 30 in Virginia Museum of Fine ArtsExotic wildlife Edit nbsp Zebra 1763 oil on canvas 102 9 x 127 6 cm Yale Center for British Art nbsp The Moose 1770 oil on canvas 61 x 70 5 cm Hunterian Art Gallery nbsp Two Leopards c 1776 oil on panel 90 5 x 137 4 cm private collection nbsp Greenland Falcon 1780 oil on panel 81 3 x 99 1 cm Yale Center for British Art nbsp Rhinoceros ca 1780 91 oil on canvas 69 9 x 92 7 cm private collection nbsp The Monkey 1799 oil on canvas 70 x 55 9 cm Walker Art GalleryList of selected artworks Edit nbsp Self Portrait ca 1759 oil on copper 14 x 10 8 cm Yale Center for British Art nbsp Sir John Nelthorpe 6th Baronet ca 1765 75 oil on canvas 127 x 101 5 cm private collection nbsp Richard Wedgewood ca 1765 75 oil on canvas Wedgewood Museum nbsp The Fall of Phaeton 1777 oil on canvas 96 5 x 122 cm National TrustIn the Yale Center for British ArtSelf Portrait 1759 The Countess of Coningsby in the Costume of the Charlton Hunt c 1760 Lustre held by a Groom c 1762 Newmarket Heath with the King s stables rubbing house at the finish of the Beacon Course c 1765 Turf with Jockey up at Newmarket c 1766 A Lion Attacking a Horse 1762 Two Gentlemen Going a Shooting with a View of Creswell Crags Taken on the Spot c 1767 Two Gentlemen Going a Shooting c 1768 Two Gentlemen Shooting c 1769 A Repose after Shooting 1770 Zebra exhibited 1763 Pumpkin with a Stable lad c 1774 Sleeping Leopard 1777 Brown and White Norfolk or Water Spanield c 1778 Greenland Falcon c 1780 Phaeton with a Pair of Cream Ponies and a Stable Lad between 1780 1784 Labourers 1781 Bulls Fighting c 1786 The Farmer s Wife and the Raven 1786 Reapers 1795 Freeman the Earl of Clarendon s gamekeeper with a dying doe and hound 1800 A Comparative Anatomical Exposition of the Human Body with that of a Tiger and a Common Fowl 1795 1806 In the Tate Gallery A Grey Hunter with Groom and a Greyhound at Creswell Crags c 1762 Horse Devoured by a Lion exhibited 1763 Horse Frightened by a Lion exhibited 1763 Mares and Foals in a River Landscape c 1763 1768 Newmarket Heath with a Rubbing Down House c 1765 Otho with John Larkin up 1768 Horse Attacked by a Lion 1769 Mother and Child 1774 Horse in the Shade of a Wood 1780 Leopards at Play 1780 Portrait of a Young Gentleman Out Shooting 1781 Haymakers 1785 Reapers 1785 Bay Hunter by a Lake 1787 A Foxhound published 1788 A Foxhound Viewed from Behind published 1788 A Horse Attacked by a Lion A Lion Devouring a Horse published 1788 A Lion Resting on a Rock published 1788 In the Royal Collection Pumpkin with William South Up c 1770 Sir Sidney Medows 1778 John Christian Santhague 1782 A Rough Dog 1790 A Bay Horse with a Groom 1791 John Gascoigne with a Bay Horse 1791 Portrait of a Gentleman 1791 Fino and Tiny 1791 Baronet with Samuel Chifney 1791 A Red Deer a Buck and a Doe 1792 Soldiers of the 10th Light Dragoons 1793 William Anderson with two Saddle Horses 1793 A Grey Horse 1793 A Grey Horse 1793 Laetitia Lady Lade 1793 The Prince of Wales s Phaeton 1793 In the National Museums LiverpoolA Lion and Tiger 1779 A Monkey 1799 Gnawpost and Two Other Colts c 1793 Haycarting 1795 Haymakers 1794 Horse and Lioness 1775 1800 Horse Frightened by a Lion James Stanley 1755 Molly Long Legs with Her Jockey Self Portrait on a White Hunter 1782 The Farmer s Wife and the Raven 1782 In the National Gallery LondonWhistlejacket 1762 A Gentleman driving a Lady in a Phaeton 1787 The Milbanke and Melbourne Families c 1769 In the National Maritime Museum GreenwichThe Kongouro from New Holland 1772 Portrait of a Large Dog 1772 Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery University of GlasgowThe Moose 1770 The Nilgai 1769 A Blackbuck 1770 1780 Hunterian Museum London The Yak of Tartary 1791 Rhinoceros 1790 1792 Drill and Albino Baboon before 1789 British Sporting Art TrustA Pointer a pair A Spaniel a pair Lord Clanbrassil with Hunter Mowbrary 1769 Fighting Stallions 1791 National TrustBritish racehorse Hambletonian National Gallery of Art WashingtonCaptain Samuel Sharpe Pocklington with His Wife Pleasance and possibly His Sister Frances 1769 White Poodle in a Punt c 1780 Victoria and Albert MuseumGoose with Outspread Wings Lions and a Lioness with a Rocky Background 1776 The Portland Collection The 3rd Duke of Portland on horseback at Welbeck Abbey William Henry Cavendish Bentinck 3rd Duke of Portland and his younger brother Lord EdwardSee also EditAnimal art English school of paintingReferences Edit a b Egerton Judy 2007 George Stubbs Painter Catalogue raisonne New Haven Conn Yale University Press ISBN 9780300125092 p 10 a b Monkhouse William Cosmo 1898 Stubbs George 1724 1806 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 55 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 113 116 a b Egerton 2007 p 12 a b Egerton 2007 p 13 Egerton 2007 p 16 a b Chronology p 12 13 in George Stubbs 1724 1806 Tate Gallery Publications Yale Center for British Art Salem NH Salem House 1985 ISBN 0881620386 Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Tate Gallery London 17 October 1984 6 January1985 and at the Yale Center for British Art New Haven Conn 13 February 7 April 1985 paintings for the exhibition selected by Judy Egerton Assistant Keeper of the British Collection Foreword The Great Artists part 50 Stubbs 1985 London Marshall Cavendish Ltd p 1571 The Great Artists part 50 Stubbs 1985 London Marshall Cavendish Ltd p 1572 The i newspaper 21 June 2013 p 2 title missing The Great Artists part 50 Stubbs 1985 London Marshall Cavendish Ltd p 1574 a b c d Egerton Judy 1984 George Stubbs 1724 1806 Tate Gallery Publications Milbank London 248 pp ISBN 0 946590 12 5 a b c Taylor Basil 1965 George Stubbs The Lion and the Horse Theme The Burlington Magazine 107 743 81 87 a b Janson H W 1977 History of Art A Survey of the Major Visual Arts from the Dawn of History to the Present Day 2nd edition Harry N Abrams Inc publishers New York 767 pp ISBN 0 8109 1052 7 Claudon Francis 1980 The Concise Encyclopedia of Romanticism Chartwell Books Inc Secaucus New Jersey 304 pp ISBN 0 89009 707 0 Clay Jean 1980 Roamanticism Chartwell Books Inc Secaucus New Jersey 320 pp ISBN 0 89009 588 4 Angus Trumble January 2007 Collection Record Pumpkin with a Stable lad Yale Center for British Art History of the Paul Mellon Centre 1962 1969 Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art Archived from the original on 29 April 2018 Retrieved 28 April 2018 George Stubbs in the Collection of Paul Mellon A Memorial Exhibition Yale Center for British Art Archived from the original on 17 September 2019 Retrieved 28 April 2018 Basil Taylor 1971 Stubbs London Phaidon Press ISBN 0 714 81498 9 Scott Reyburn 6 July 2011 Stubbs Gainsborough Records Boost 80 Million Auction Bloomberg Search results George Stubbs 1724 1806 Royal Collection a b c George Stubbs kangaroo and dingo paintings to stay in UK BBC News Online 6 November 2013 Retrieved 6 November 2013 Whitechapel GalleryFurther reading EditBoyle Frederick amp Mayer Joseph Memoirs of Thomas Dodd William Upcott and George Stubbs R A Liverpool D Marples 1879 Egerton Judy George Stubbs 1724 1806 Tate Gallery Publications 1984 Egerton Judy George Stubbs Painter Catalogue Raisonne New Haven and London Published for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art by Yale University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 300 12509 2 Rump Gerhard C Pferde und Jagdbilder in der englischen Kunst Studien zu George Stubbs und dem Genre der Sporting Art von 1650 1830 Olms Hildesheim New York 1983 ISBN 3 487 07425 7 Gilbey Walter Animal Painters of England from the Year 1650 Volume 2 Vinton 1900 p 192 ff Morrison Venetia Art of George Stubbs Headline Book Pub 1989 Myrone Martin George Stubbs British Artists series Tate Publishing 2002 Taylor Basil Stubbs London Phaidon Prees 1971 ISBN 0 714 81498 9External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Stubbs 71 artworks by or after George Stubbs at the Art UK site George Stubbs online Artcyclopedia George Stubbs a celebration Walker Art Gallery George Stubbs Encyclopedia of Irish and World Art George Stubbs s biography Mezzo Mundo Fine Art Paintings by George Stubbs Tate Gallery Profile on Royal Academy of Arts Collections Selected images from Anatomy of the Horse From The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Digital Library Judy Egerton archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Stubbs amp oldid 1174231629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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