YOU could trace the history of the early years of the Turf through George Stubbsâs racehorse pictures. Marske, Eclipse, Gimcrack, Dungannon and Hambletonian were among the 18th-century champions he painted, sometimes set against the vast, austere backdrop of Newmarket Heath, the spiritual home of Flat racing. Ironically, however, Stubbs did not care for the crowds and noise of racetracks. His images were more reposeful and he seldom showed horses in their galloping strides. Perhaps itâs fitting that the animal in his most famous picture, Whistlejacket, was not even a great racehorse and was only moderately successful at stud.
Ever since the National Gallery acquired Stubbsâs rousing study of the 2nd Marquess of Rockinghamâs prancing, flaxen-maned stallion in 1997, it has been one of the museumâs most popular paintings, a spellbinding portrait of grace, power and wildness. Yet only recently has Stubbs received adequate recognition. In his lifetime, he was disparagingly referred to as âMr. Stubbs, horse painterâ. After his death in 1806, with the finest works in private collections, he nearly disappeared from view. How could a man whose favoured subjects were racehorses be worth close scrutiny? Vigorous advocacy by art historian Basil Taylor, the author of Stubbs (1971), eventually sparked a revival of interest and, by 2007, Judy Egertonâs description of the artist in her painstaking George Stubbs, Painter (2007) as âone of the greatest of British 18th-century painters, with a deep and unaffected sympathy for country life and the English countrysideâ could hardly be disputed. Itâs surprising that the 300th anniversary of his birth is not to be marked by a national exhibition.
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Tales as old as time
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