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George Stubbs  1724-1806

George Stubbs Horse Frightened by a Lion ?exhibited 1763
Horse Frightened by a Lion  ?exhibited 1763

Oil on canvas
unconfirmed: 705 x 1019 mm frame: 885 x 1208 x 85 mm
painting

Purchased with assistance from the National Heritage Memorial Fund, the Art Fund and the Friends of the Tate Gallery 1994

T06869

The dramatic theme of a lion attacking a horse preoccupied Stubbs for over thirty years. This painting comes from a series of four episodes in a terrifying attack on a passive horse. This is the first stage, as the horse scents the lion emerging from its cave and rises up in fright. The setting for this violent encounter is the harsh, rocky landscape of Creswell Crags in the Peak District. The area was then an inaccessible, wild region whose mysterious caves and crannies fascinated Stubbs. The scenery makes a suitably romantic background for the ‘sublime’ drama of the scene.

 (From the display caption March 2010)