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Pages in category "Equine artists" The following 91 pages are in this category, out of 91 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Albrecht Adam; Emil Adam;
This is a partial list of artists active in Britain, arranged chronologically ... James Seymour (c.1702–1752) – English painter especially of equestrian art;
Military art often depicts the horse in battle and provides some of the earliest examples of the horse in art, with cavalry, horse-drawn chariots, and horse archers all appearing on ancient artifacts. In the medieval period, cavalry battles and knights on horseback were portrayed by artists including Paolo Uccello and Albrecht Dürer.
Harry Hall (c. 1814 – 22 April 1882) was an English equestrian painter, whose works were in demand by horse owners. His output was prolific and he was the foremost racehorse portraitist of his time: his style has been described as being "strikingly modern... when compared with many of his contemporaries". [ 1 ]
George Wright was one of the foremost equestrian artists of his time. [6] He was one of a family of seven children, five of whom were professional artists, either principally as painters, or as illustrators. Wright is sometimes confused with George Wright (1851 – 1 February 1916), [14] a Scottish landscape painter who lived in Annan. [note 3 ...
The Amazon, by August Kiss, Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1837, this cast 1929. The Lion Fighter, by Albert Wolff, Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1858. Pegasus (pair of statues), by Vincent Pilz, Memorial Hall, ca. 1863. Rejected for the Vienna State Operahouse, they were installed in Philadelphia in 1876.
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John F. Herring Jr. was born in Doncaster, then in the West Riding of Yorkshire c.1820, to the well-known 19th-century artist John Frederick Herring Sr. (1795–1865), who at the time, was considered one of England's great Sporting and Equestrian artists, patronized by the English aristocracy. [1]