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Stubbs, George
b. Aug. 24, 1724, Liverpool, Eng.
d. July 10, 1806, London
outstanding English animal painter and anatomical draftsman.
The son of a prosperous tanner, Stubbs was briefly apprenticed to a painter but was
basically self-taught. His interest in anatomy, revealed at an early age, became one of
the driving passions of his life. His earliest surviving works are 18 plates etched for
Dr. John Burton's Essay Towards a Complete New System of Midwifery (1751). In the 1750s
Stubbs made an exhaustive analysis of the anatomy of the horse. He rented a farmhouse in a
remote Lincolnshire village, where, over a period of 18 months, he undertook the
painstaking dissection of innumerable specimens. After moving permanently to London in
1760, Stubbs etched the plates for Anatomy of the Horse (1766), which became a major work
of reference for naturalists and художники
alike. Stubbs soon established a reputation as
the leading painter of portraits of the horse. His masterly depictions of hunters and
racehorses brought him innumerable commissions. Perhaps more impressive than the single
portraits are his pictures of informal groups of horses, such as "Mares and Foals in
a Landscape" (c. 1760-70; Tate Gallery, London).
Stubbs also painted a wide variety of other animals, including the lion, tiger, giraffe,
monkey, and rhinoceros, which he was able to observe in private menageries. According to
the artist Ozias Humphrey, Stubbs was so convinced of the importance of observation that
he visited Italy in 1754 only to reinforce his belief that nature is superior to art.
Among Stubbs's best-known pictures are several depicting a horse being frightened or
attacked by a lion ("Horse Frightened by a Lion," 1770) in which he emphasizes
the wild terror of the former and the predatory power of the latter.
Stubbs's historical живопись
s are among the least successful of his works; much more
convincing are his scenes of familiar страны
activities done in the 1770s. Unfortunately,
he tended to execute his живопись
s in thin oil paint, and relatively few survive in
undamaged condition. In later life Stubbs knew considerable hardship. His last years were
spent on a final work of anatomical analysis: A Comparative Anatomical Exposition of the
Structure of the Human Body, with that of a Tiger and Common Fowl, for which he completed
100 рисунок
and 18 engravings. The Anatomical Works of George Stubbs was published in
1975.
(ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA)
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