
Not on display
- Artist
- George Stubbs 1724–1806
- Medium
- Oil paint on canvas
- Dimensions
- Support: 1016 × 1619 mm
frame: 1229 × 1815 × 64 mm - Collection
- Tate
- Acquisition
- Purchased with assistance from the Pilgrim Trust 1959
- Reference
- T00295
Summary
The original idea for the frieze-like arrangement of the early mares and foals paintings may have been suggested by engravings by Matham after Collaert and others, which show animals as if on a stage in the foreground, against generalised backgrounds. For most of his mares and foals subjects Stubbs almost certainly drew the animals from life, perhaps first making numerous studies and then carefully arranging them into an ideal composition; however, no such studies have been located. It is known from an unfinished picture in the series that the artist first painted the horses in perfect detail, stretching them across a blank background like the figures in a classical frieze, before carefully inserting the (probably imaginary) landscape into the background. The resulting complex compositional structure demonstrates Stubbs's knowledge of classical principles, gained on a trip to Italy in 1754, as well as his sense of pattern and rhythm. Mares and Foals in a River Landscape utilises a classical composition which gives an overall symmetry and balance to the group, in which the three mares and their foals are placed so as roughly to form a cone, with their rumps marking the perimeter and their heads the apex. The feeding foals are essential to the composition, allowing the spectator's eye to be drawn over the whole group in a slow revolving rhythm.
Stubbs exhibited a number of mares and foals pictures at the Society of Artists and the Royal Academy in the 1760s and 1770s, providing an opportunity for patrons to commission such works to include their own animals. It would not have been unusual, given Stubbs's large output in the 1760s, for him to borrow from an earlier composition, but it is remarkable that the patron who commissioned this picture (possibly Viscount Midleton) does not seem to have had any horses of his own portrayed. Possibly he liked the subject, but did not possess any brood mares.
Further reading:
Basil Taylor,
Stubbs, London 1971, pp.206-7, reproduced pl.24
Judy Egerton, George Stubbs 1724-1806, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1984, reprinted 1996, pp.125-31, reproduced p.127 in colour
Terry Riggs
January 1998
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Display caption
This painting seems to have been used as an ‘overdoor’, hung with two other pictures by Stubbs above the doors in the dining room of George Brodrick, 3rd Viscount Midleton, MP (1730–65). Reflecting the ornamental use to which this painting was to be put, it seems that Stubbs, the premier animal painter of his day, did not set out to be especially original. The figures of the horses are the same as those appearing in another painting, a commission for Lord Rockingham representing specific horses owned by him, although the colour of one has been changed from brown to grey.
Gallery label, February 2016
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