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John King or John Gregory King (16 April 1929 – 8 September 2014) was an English painter, considered a leading sporting artist of the post war era. [1] His works stretched from military and ceremonial occasions, to horse and hound portraits, and hunting scenes.
Barrie Reith Linklater (11 June 1931 – 24 March 2017) was a British illustrator and painter, latterly specialising in equine subjects.. Linklater was born in Birmingham, then in Warwickshire, England, on 11 June 1931.
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]
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 ...
George Thomas Paice (24 November 1854 – 14 March 1925) [1] was a British landscape, canine, hunting, and equestrian painter. Born in Pimlico, London, Paice studied at the Heatherley School of Fine Art and at the Royal Academy from 1905-1910. He worked mostly for private collectors, his paintings almost never present at public exhibitions.
Self portrait of Hall. 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]
"Eclipse" and "Shakespeare" (engraving by John Scott after Sartorius). John Nost Sartorius was the son of horse-artist Francis Sartorius and the grandson of John Sartorius.He was patronised by the leading sportsmen of the day, such as the Prince of Wales, the Earl of Derby, Lord Foley, Sir Charles Bunbury, and many others, and his pictures (some of them of large size) were found in many ...
Conmissioned by the Liverpool Carter's Association, it is a monument to the working horse, used by carters in Liverpool for more than 250 years, to move goods from the docks to warehouses or to railway goods stations. [10] [11] "Rebellion" is a statue of a horse in Middlesex Street in Spitalfields, London, commissioned by Standard Life.