The horse is probably the most common animal to be found in Western paintings. They can be seen in battle paintings from the Middle Ages to the First World War, carrying knights and lancers, pulling carts and guns, or removing the wounded. In nineteenth-century paintings of cavalry charges the horses are as heroic as the soldiers.
In many royal and aristocratic portraits being astride a horse can project a military image.
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Related to this is the image of the hunter, traditionally the preserve of landowners and the gentry. The rise of organised horseracing in the eighteenth century led to the specialism of horse painters, of whom Stubbs is the best known and, because of his intense study of horse anatomy, the most talented.
Artworks
WhistlejacketGeorge Stubbs (1724–1806)
The National Gallery, London
Industrial SceneJohn Wilson Carmichael (1799–1868)
Nottingham City Museums & Galleries
Sir TristramChristopher Le Brun (b.1951)
Southampton City Art Gallery
A Sale at TattersallsRobert Polhill Bevan (1865–1925)
Southampton City Art Gallery
Edward I (1239–1307)Hamo Thornycroft (1850–1925)
Southampton City Art Gallery
Central Park, New YorkMaxwell Ashby Armfield (1881–1972)
Southampton City Art Gallery
Village SceneTheobald Michau (1676–1765) (attributed to)