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Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Sculptures of horses" The following 54 pages are in this category, out of 54 total.
The sculpture is titled Business Man on Horse. [24] The sculpture does not portray a specific individual. — Yorkton, Saskatchewan: 2010 Lionel Peyachew Located on the grounds of Painted Hand Casino. The sculpture is titled Counting Coup, named after a practice with warriors of the First Nations of the Canadian Prairies. [25] The sculpture ...
"Waiting: The Monument to the Liverpool Working Horse" is a bronze statue of a horse, height 1.8 metres (5 ft 11 in), on the quayside outside the Museum of Liverpool, unveiled on 1 May 2010. 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 ...
It is considered the first monumental equestrian statue since classical antiquity, and also one of the first to depict a horse shoe. Beneath the horse's front hooves is one of the many sculptural representations of the Green Man. Kathleen Basford, in her study of these figures, calls this Green Man the "dark counterpart" of the horseman.
Notable statues made by Breceda include a stagecoach pulled by horses, a large serpent, and a Tyrannosaurus rex. Breceda was the subject of a book called "Ricardo Breceda: Accidental Artist", and his art was cited by both The Huffington Post and The San Diego Union-Tribune as reasons why people should visit the Anza-Borrego Desert.
Each dog has a unique expression on its face — it's almost like they're a smaller version of the real thing. "They come in all shapes and sizes. Tall, small, long legs, short legs, long hair and ...
Leonardo da Vinci's study in silverpoint for The Horse, c. 1488 [1] Study in silverpoint for the monument (abandoned design), c. 1490 [2]. Leonardo's Horse (also known as the Sforza Horse or the Gran Cavallo ("Great Horse") ) is a project for a bronze sculpture that was commissioned from Leonardo da Vinci in 1482 by the Duke of Milan Ludovico il Moro, but never completed.
Bleu horses installation as seen from Highway 287. The sculptures are realistic enough to appear live from a distance, but are intended to be somewhat "impressionistic." To emphasize the elegance of the horse, the legs of the horse sculptures are one-third longer than those of real horses, [7] and they average 8 feet (2.4 m) high at the withers. [6]