Exhibition | Stubbs (1724–1806): Anatomist
Now on view at Palace House in Newmarket:
Stubbs (1724–1806): Anatomist
National Heritage Centre for Horseracing and Sporting Art, Newmarket, 27 June — 28 September 2019
In summer 2019, Palace House, The National Heritage Centre for Horseracing and Sporting Art will display a set of unique drawings by Britain’s most renowned animal painter, George Stubbs (1724–1806). The ten works, on loan from the Yale Center for British Art, have not been seen in the UK for many years. The drawings form the core of an exhibition that illuminate aspects of Stubbs’s life and interest which have previously been underexplored and highlights the exceptional nature of his painting and drawing techniques.
Stubbs was one of the most original and pioneering artists of the 18th century. His prowess as a painter of horses is well known, but his later study of the anatomy of a wide variety of animals to compare with the human figure is less widely documented.
His great reputation as an extraordinary painter of horses was forged in a remote Lincolnshire farmhouse. In his early thirties, Stubbs relocated from York to Horkstow, near Hull and spent the next 18 months (1756–58), unflinchingly and painstakingly dissecting up to a dozen horses, documenting their musculature, veins, and skeletons. The sheer effort it took to suspend the horses by a system of hooks, ropes, and planks attached to the farmhouse’s ceiling and then injecting their veins with wax in order to preserve them can only be imagined.The result was his celebrated book, The Anatomy of the Horse—a copy of which (from the Palace House collection) will be on display in the exhibition.
Following The Anatomy of the Horse, Stubbs moved to London, where he continued his interest in dissection and anatomy, alongside his increasingly successful career as a painter. He was 71-years old when he started working on Comparative Anatomical Exposition, a study reflecting ideas about fundamental structural characteristics shared by all living things.
Stubbs didn’t seek to make direct comparisons between species, as the title might suggest, but to apply empirical methods of observation and draftsmanship among dissimilar creatures—fowl, tiger, and man—to analyse a core set of similarities from which to make key conclusions. Just as his huge undertaking at Horkstow, this was another highly ambitious project, with the aim of a major publication with sixty plates. Stubbs sadly did not complete this as he died in 1806.
Acquired by the sporting art enthusiast, Paul Mellon, the completed Comparative Anatomical Exposition drawings underpin Mellon’s collecting habits and his deep passion for this subject. The display of comparative anatomy drawings joins numerous works at the National Heritage Centre which were donated by him to the National Horseracing Museum and British Sporting Art Trust collections.
Exhibition | Deconstructed: The NSLM Sporting Screen
From the NSLM:
Deconstructed: The NSLM Sporting Screen
The National Sporting Library & Museum, Middleburg, Virginia, 12 April — 15 September 2019
Deconstructed: The NSLM Sporting Screen centers on a unique decorative object from the NSLM’s permanent collection. Recently conserved, the four-panel screen is comprised of paintings and prints showing 18th-century racing portraits on one side and manège training (an early form of dressage) on the other. The exhibit will cast light on a captivating era in British sport, art, and literature.
As noted in the Summer 2019 bulletin for the YCBA:
The exhibition features seven works from the Yale Center for British Art by John Vanderbank, including the painting A Young Gentleman Riding a Schooled Horse (1728–29).
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