A Rare Original Work by Henry Alken Compiled by Legendary 19th-Century Connoisseur Frank T. Sabin
Henry Alken
The finishing of a coursing match
8 1/4 x 10 1/2;
Framed: 24 x 20 1/2 inches
Signed and titled lower right
$7,500
This is a fine sporting watercolor by the acclaimed British
artists Samuel and Henry Alken. It was
part of a collection that was scrupulously assembled by the legendary early
19th-century collector and dealer Frank T. Sabin, and reflect the superb tastes
and unrivaled eye of this most sophisticated connoisseur.
Samuel
Alken and his son Henry were the most prominent members of a successful family
of artists, and two of the best-known sporting artists of late 18th and early
19th-century Britain. Samuel's parents
had emigrated to England from Denmark, and he built his own artistic career to
a great level of fame through his mastery of the quintessential British subject
matter: the hunt. He entered the Royal
Academy Schools, London, as a sculptor in 1772.
In 1779 he published A New Book of Ornaments Designed and Etched by
Samuel Alken, afterwards establishing himself as one of the most competent
engravers in the new technique of aquatint, and he won wide acclaim for his
many sporting prints. Working in this
genre, Alken became one of the most prolific and acclaimed British sporting
artists of his day, and passed his skills on to his son. Samuel was responsible for the early art
instruction that set his son, Henry, on a path towards even greater recognition
than his own. Henry received his
training not just from his father, but also from the miniature painter J. T.
Beaumont (1774-1851), an experience that endowed him with an accomplished
graphic precision. He applied this skill
to his flippant and anecdotal early paintings, etchings and watercolors of hunting,
coaching, racing and other animal subjects.
He was also employed by sporting periodicals as an illustrator, and
provided plates for the National Sports of Great Britain (London, 1821),
strengthening the market for his work in sporting circles, in particular the
notorious clique of wealthy and reckless huntsmen who gathered at Melton
Mowbray, Leics.
Both
men produced a great body of work, from watercolors and oils to popular
cartoons and fine lithographs and engravings.
Their masterful compositions encapsulate the spirit of the hunt, and
demonstrate their flawless depictions of horses, painted masterfully in various
states of movement and rest. As the
present selection of their extremely rare original work shows, these two
versatile artists excelled in a variety of subject matter, sometimes making
forays into more humorous genres.
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