Lascaux sportsmen 13,000 years ago. |
With the possible exception of the sculpted nude female figure, it's the oldest
subject in art. As I've pointed out many times before, man has always painted that which is most important to him. When we
look back at the very first and most archival paintings on earth, those that
adorn the walls of caves, often dating back some 20,000 years, we find men
bearing spears in pursuit of wild animals. He needed their meat to survive; but
such hunting scenes also bear witness to the joys of the hunt. So, whether
enjoying the pleasures of the nude female figure in his cave, or that of hunting
animals on the outside, we find in his art the two most important elements in
his life. Thousands of years later, portraits by Velázquez of King Philip IV of
Spain and others by Gainsborough all depict their male subjects bearing arms,
ready for the hunt. So it was up until the nineteenth century.
Hunt in the Forest, 1460, Paolo Uccello |
Aside from some ancient Egyptian wall paintings and those mentioned above from the walls of the caveman's abode, Paolo Uccello's Hunt in the Forest (above), dating from around 1460, may be
the earliest sporting painting to survive. It's a broad view of a group of Florentine huntsmen and their servants,
horses, and dogs as they surround a small group of deer. With its idealized,
mostly rather flat figures, and prevalent symmetry, the whole work seems rather
staged. But Uccello's amazing grasp of perspective and one or two exceptional
images, seemingly drawn from life, lift this work above the genre of mere
decoration.
Bullfight in a Village, 1815, Francisco de Goya |
Doncaster Races, Horses Starting for the St. Leger, 1831, James Pollard |
By the early nineteenth century, another sport had overtaken much of Europe--horse racing. Around 1831, James Pollard, in his Doncaster Races, Horses
Starting for the St. Leger (above), painted us a broad panorama that captures the
entire scene: horses, spectators, track, and the surrounding structures. The
only problem is, he has painted us the entire scene: horses, spectators, track,
and the surrounding structures. Even though the work is quite large, there's
simply too much there for the eye to focus upon any one thing in the painting.
Even the larger elements, the coaches in the foreground and the sizable,
Neo-classical structures in the background, all of which are relatively
unimportant to the sport of racing, fail to capture our attention. Though the
starter is dead centre, he is so small as to go quite unnoticed in the overall
scheme of the scene.
Jockeys Before the Start, 1879, Edgar Degas |
Right and Left 1909, Winslow Homer |
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