Important Sporting Paintings & Sculpture

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Important Sporting Paintings & Sculpture



Important Sporting Paintings & Sculpture

a catalog presented in collaboration

PETER L. VILLA FINE ART, LLC

American & European Paintings from the 18th – 21st Centuries P.O. Box 143 – 10 Todd Avenue Peapack, New Jersey 07977 In New York by Appointment 212-371-1196 peter@plvillafineart.com www.peterlvillafineart.com and

RED FOX FINE ART

Sporting Paintings & Sculpture P.O. Box 385 – 2 East Washington Street Middleburg, Virginia 20117 703-851-5160 F. Turner Reuter, Jr. tr@redfoxfineart.com www.redfoxfineart.com



A Note of Introduction

F

orty years of shared enthusiasm for the field sports and country life has inspired our decision to publish this collaborative catalog. By coincidence of timing and through the contributions of a generation of like-minded collectors, we are able to offer exceptional examples by celebrated sporting painters and sculptors, spanning a period of over 250 years. We are particularly fortunate to have an extraordinary assembly of works by Ogden M. Pleissner, recognized as one of the most accomplished American sporting artists of the 20th century. It is immediately apparent that the artists presented in this catalog benefited from first hand experience. Accomplished sportsmen in their own right, they often traveled the world developing an intimate knowledge of the great variety of game, landscapes and sporting traditions familiar to their patrons. Their keen sense of observation combined with remarkable artistic talent created an enthusiastic demand for their work that continues to resonate with collectors today. Please note that all paintings and sculpture are offered subject to prior sale. Artworks can be viewed by appointment, or by delivery to a buyer’s location on approval. Prices, provenance, and full details of each entry are available on request.

Peter L. Villa

Opposite: A.J. MUNNINGS, (detail) Plate 25

F. Turner Reuter, Jr.


Important Sporting Paintings & Sculpture a catalog presented in collaboration

Peter L. Villa Fine Art & Red Fox Fine Art Copyright 2018 Peter L. Villa Fine Art, LLC / Red Fox Fine Art All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means - electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without written permission of the publishers. ISBN-13: 978-0-692-09237-8 Library of Congress Control Number: 2018938276 Published in the United States by Peter L. Villa Fine Art, LLC & Red Fox Fine Art Printed in the U.S.A. by District Creative Printing, 6350 Fallard Drive, Upper Marlboro, Maryland Layout and Design: Andrew Hock Artwork Photography: Brian Birlauf Photography Brandon Webster Photography

Front Cover: OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (detail) Plate 6 Opposite: PERCIVAL LEONARD ROSSEAU (detail) Plate 17 Back Cover: ISIDORE JULES BONHEUR Plate 29



1. HERBERT HASELTINE (American, 1877-1962) Suffolk Punch, 1929 Signed, dated, numbered and inscribed on the marble base Š HASELTINE, MCMXXIX, V, Suffolk Punch Bronze; mottled brown and green patina with applied gold and silver highlights to the forelock, mane and tail bronze dimensions: 11 x 131/2 x 31/2 inches; marble base dimension: 61/2 x 131/2 x 6 inches

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HERBERT HASELTINE Suffolk Punch, 1929 Exhibited: Knoedler Gallery, Chicago, IL 1930 Note: Haseltine said of the horse…“The minute I saw Subourne Premier, the magnificent stallion of the famous breed of chestnuts, all my troubles were forgotten and my only thought was to get to work.” Sudbourne Premier, was by the sire Sudbourne Beau Brocade out of the dam Sudbourne Moonlight. He was bred by Lord Manton, owned by Percy C. Vesty, Easton Park, Wickham Market and was foaled in 1919. Among many wins, Sudbourne Premier was First and Champion at the Show of Royal Agricultural Society of England 1921 and 1922; First and Champion at the Suffolk Show 1922 and 1924; First and Champion at the Woodbridge Show 1923 and First at the Derby Show in the same year. Casting Note: Haseltine produced the Suffolk Punch model in three sizes as a part of the British Champion Animals series. The large version, approximately one quarter life-size, was limited to just two examples with the first going to the Field Museum, Chicago, IL. The medium version was one eighth life-size and was produced on demand as a part of the complete set, although research suggests that less than ten casts of this set were made. Finally, a small version, one sixteenth in size of the model was produced and sold as a part of the complete set – just six of these were made. The present example is from the medium size edition and is the finest example we have seen of this model. Previous examples, with one exception, have had more traditional patinas and less or no gilding nor silver bows on the forelock and tail.

Literature: Herbert Haseltine, An Exhibition of Sculpture of British Champion Animals, Knoedler Gallery, London, 1925, illus. pg. 9 Herbert Haseltine, An Exhibition of Sculpture, Knoedler Gallery, London, 1930, illus. no. 1 Herbert Haseltine: Exhibition of Sculpture of British Champion Animals, Field Museum, Chicago, IL, 1934, illus. cat. no. 3 Herbert Haseltine, American Sculptors Series, 1948, illus. pg. 41 Haseltine, Hirschl & Adler Galleries, New York, 1992, illus. pg. 30 The Haseltines, Arthur Ackermann and Peter Johnson Ltd., London,1998, illus. pg. 14 American Sculpture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Vol II, 2000, illus. pg. 609-614 Champion Animals, Sculptures by Herbert Haseltine, VMFA, Richmond, VA, 1996, pg. 26-27.

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The Art of Ogden M. Pleissner

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ver the course of many years, a considerable number of artists have endeavored to capture the essence of fly-fishing for salmon and trout, gunning for waterfowl, shooting ruffed grouse and woodcock, quail or driven grouse; however few have managed to equal the work of Winslow Homer, Frank W. Benson, A.L. Ripley, and Ogden Pleissner. Pleissner considered himself to be a “landscape painter who also likes to hunt and fish.” He is an artist whose beautiful renderings of the natural environment always leave out some detail for the mind’s eye to fill in, thereby drawing the viewer into the oil painting or watercolor. Pleissner felt that “a fine painting is not just the subject ... it is the feeling conveyed of form, bulk, space, dimensionality, and sensitivity. The mood of the picture, that is the most important.” Thomas S. Buechner, an old friend and an authority on art history, has this to say about Ogden Pleissner: “There is a special joy in witnessing a champion performance – in tennis, politics, or in painting. Anyone who knows anything about recording the visual world in paint must be awestruck by Pleissner’s performance. Extremely complicated subjects are rendered so accurately, so spontaneously, so appreciatively that comparison with Homer and Sargent is inevitable … Catching a fish or fueling a plane may be the subject, but the picture is about an emotion that the

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artist has; he uses these things, arranges them, colors them, lights them to convey a mood ... Pleissner invites us to transcend our focus on action to see the whole scene – quietly, and from a little distance.” Sporting art is exactly that, art with a sporting theme. There is obvious or hidden prey in the picture and game is depicted in a well-painted landscape that may also include a figure holding a rod or gun; or simply could be an image of a stream, river, marsh, moor or hillside where one senses that a fish or bird lies in waiting. Artists who have the potential to create great sporting art know well the habits of the wild creatures, and have committed to memory every detail of their habitats. These artists have experienced the thrill of an Atlantic salmon or a large trout taking a well-presented fly, the explosion of a bursting covey of quail, sunrise over a duck marsh, running the rapids in a canoe, or sleeping under the stars. Ogden Pleissner is one of these men and his great skill as an artist can be recognized by the fine collection of his oils and watercolors illustrated in this catalog. Peter Bergh Edwards, Colorado Author of The Art of Ogden M. Pleissner


2. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) Grouse Shooting Signed Watercolor on paper, 15 x 29 inches

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3. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) Edge of the Cotton Field, Quail Shooting Signed Watercolor on paper, 14 ½ x 21½ inches

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4. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) The Covey Rise Signed, inscribed in pencil in the margin with date 1960 Watercolor on paper, 16 ½ x 27½ inches

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5. GEORGE WRIGHT (British, 1860-1942) On the Moor – Walking up Signed, painted circa 1915 Oil on canvas, 14 x 201/8 inches

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6. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) Driven Grouse, Perthshire Signed Oil on canvas, 18 ½ x 28 inches

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7. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) A High Shot, Perthshire Signed Watercolor on paper, 18 x 28 inches

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8. ARTHUR WARDLE (British, 1864-1949) Setters on the Moor Signed Oil on canvas, 24 x 19 inches

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9. JOHN MARTIN TRACY (American, 1843-1893) In the Grouse Woods Signed, painted circa 1886 Oil on canvas, 30 x 50 inches

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10. JOHN MARTIN TRACY (American, 1843-1893) In Quail Country Signed, painted circa 1886 Oil on canvas, 30¼ x 50¼ inches

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11. ARTHUR BURDETT FROST (American 1851-1928) Still Life of Hanging Ducks Signed Oil on canvas, 18 x 15 inches

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12. GUSTAVE CAILLEBOTTE (French, 1848-1894) Trois Perdrix sur une Table Signed, painted circa 1880 Oil on canvas, 15 x 22 ½ inches

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13. ARTHUR BURDETT FROST (American, 1851-1928) Good Shot and Good Dog Oil on canvas en grisaille, 16 ½ x 23¼ inches

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14. EDMUND HENRY OSTHAUS (American, 1858-1928) A Setter Retrieving a Quail Signed and dated 1891 Oil on canvas, 22 x 28 inches

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15. AIDEN LASSEL RIPLEY (American, 1896-1969) Late Season Quail Shooting Signed, dated 1938 and inscribed as titled verso Watercolor on paper, 15 x 24 inches

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16. AIDEN LASSEL RIPLEY (American, 1896-1969) Covey Rise Signed Watercolor on paper, 18 ½ x 29¼ inches

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17. PERCIVAL LEONARD ROSSEAU (American, 1859-1937) A Brace on Point Signed and dated 1914 Oil on canvas, 16 x 10 ¾ inches

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18. PERCIVAL LEONARD ROSSEAU (American, 1859-1937) Setters in a Landscape Signed and dated 1904 Oil on canvas, 57 x 71 inches

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19. ARTHUR FITZWILLIAM TAIT (American, 1819-1905) Quail and Young Signed, inscribed and dated NY 1859 Oil on canvas, 14¼ x 22¼ inches

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20. GUSTAVE MUSS ARNOLT (American, 1858-1927) Pointers in a Landscape Signed and dated 92 Oil on canvas, 22 x 34 inches

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21. PERCIVAL LEONARD ROSSEAU (American, 1859-1937) Setters on Birds Signed, dated 1913 and stamped Roman Bronze Works N-Y Bronze; edition, cast unique, rich dark brown patina, 8 ½ x 15½ x 9½ inches

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22. FERDINAND PAUTROT (French, 1832-1874) Gun Dogs and Game, a pair Both signed and stamped Admis aux Beau Arts and Ball, Black & Co., New –York Bronze; dark brown patina, 18 ½ x 14 x 8½ inches

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23. GEORGE BROWNE (American, 1918-1958) Quail in the Pine Lands, 1956 Signed Oil on canvas, 24 x 36 inches

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24. PERCIVAL LEONARD ROSSEAU (American, 1859-1937) Morning: Setters on Point Signed, dated 1922 and inscribed verso,“Morning” / Banrock Tippet B. and Sam / Cat. # 13 Oil on canvas, 26 x 32 inches

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SIR ALFRED JAMES MUNNINGS, PRA Under Starter’s Orders, Newmarket

Provenance: Private Collection, Great Britain Mrs. C. Oliver Iselin, III, Virginia, USA Sale Christie’s, New York, Important British & American Sporting Paintings, June 10, 1983, lot #194

Literature: Sir Alfred Munnings, The Finish, London, 1952, a larger related version titled Moving Up illustrated between pages 216 & 217.

A Private American Collection, 1983 until the present Munnings’ love of color, equine movement and the drama of the racing scene led him to Newmarket where he had been given access to the course’s starting area. There, for four decades, he would record the endless motifs of horses in the moments before the start of a race.

– colour, all dependent on the lighting, the sky ... a large field waiting, waiting, regrouping ... what a sight for the artist! with the long shadows and the lights on the boots, lights on the horses ... ” (Munnings, The Finish, 1952, pages 216-17).

Munnings repeatedly painted the theme of horses jostling for position for the most advantageous start. Not only did this shift the colorful highlights of jockeys’ silks and gleaming equine coats, but the various groupings provided Munnings with opportunities to play with the viewers’ visual subconscious. Degas was renowned for the same technique in his ballet paintings, in which the figures’ placement encouraged the mind to generate movement.

In this work, Munnings has disturbed a frieze configuration by angling the first and last prominent horses from the main line of runners. The last horse is shown ready to bolt, subconsciously propelling the group’s forward motion. The first horse, on the other hand, is positioned inward, holding back the perceived forward movement that the last horse has generated. This semicircular arrangement suggests that Munnings wanted to emphasize the containment of the runners who are “under starter’s orders”.

In the third volume of his autobiography, Munnings describes his favorite Newmarket course: “I am standing on the course - the most beautiful course in the world ... I am looking at the scene, the old, old scene – a centuries old scene ... seeing visible beauty; the grouping, the movement

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We are grateful to Lorian Peralta-Ramos for kindly assisting in the cataloguing of this work, which will be included in her forthcoming catalog raisonné of Sir Alfred James Munnings, PRA.


25. SIR ALFRED JAMES MUNNINGS, PRA (British, 1878-1959) Under Starter’s Orders, Newmarket Signed Oil on board, 17 ½ x 24 inches

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EDGAR DEGAS Cheval faisant une descente de main, 1865-1881 Note: This bronze was cast by the lost wax process at the Hébrard Foundry, Paris prior to 1924. Before casting it was signed, stamped and numbered in the wax Degas A.A. Hébrard Cire Perdue 22 /M Provenance: Acquired from Hébrard, by Walter Halvorsen, Glasgow, March 1, 1924 Alex Reid, Glasgow Sir David Cargill, Lannock Sotheby's, London, March 23, 1983 Private Collection, USA Sladmore Gallery, London, 2012

Dimensions including base: 8 x 12 x 4 inches

Casting Note: Of the 150 or so wax models found in Degas's studio at the time of his death 72 were deemed in good enough condition to be moulded, a task entrusted to the Hébrard foundry. Hébrard's contract with the family was to cast an edition of 20 of these 72 models (which he inscribed A to T). In addition, he was to provide a full set for the Degas family (inscribed 'HER.D' standing for ‘Hériteurs Degas’) as well as being allowed a full set for himself (inscribed 'HER'), making a total of twenty-two sets in all.

The Hébrard foundry’s working practice was to produce a ‘modèle’ in bronze which was kept as a benchmark against which all subsequent casts in an edition could be checked. The existence of the ‘modèle’ set of the Degas bronzes was however unrecorded and these only surfaced in the mid 1970’s – they were exhibited at the Lefevre Gallery in London and sold to the Norton Simon Museum, California in 1976. Thus a potential total of 23 examples in bronze could exist of each of the 72 chosen models.

For stock control and accounting purposes Hébrard allocated all the chosen wax models a number from 1 to 72 and the relevant number appears inscribed on each individual bronze and each bronze bears the Hébrard foundry stamp applied before casting into the wax: 'A. A. Hébrard Cire Perdue'.

The original wax working model of this piece survives and is in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. (gift of Mr and Mrs Paul Mellon 1991). Bronze examples are in the following museums: The Musée d'Orsay, Paris; the Metropolitan Museum of Fine Art, New York and the Norton Simon Museum, California among others.

The full set of 72 works was first exhibited in 1921 at the Galerie Hébrard. The casting of 22 sets of 72 figures (1584 in total) would have been a mammoth task, and while they began in 1919 and continued throughout the 1920s and 1930s until the foundry closed its doors in 1936, even then, not all of the casts of each model were made.

Please contact us for a comprehensive essay related to this cast of Cheval faisant une descente de main, 1865-1881, including exhibition records and references in literature.

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26. EDGAR DEGAS (French, 1834-1917) Cheval faisant une descente de main, 1865-1881 Signed, inscribed and numbered Bronze; rich reddy brown patina with dark brown undertones, 7 x 11 x 31/2

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27. BENJAMIN MARSHALL (British, 1768-1835) Zinganee, Held by Sam Chifney, Jr. Wearing Lord Chesterfield’s Colors After Winning the Oatlands Stakes, Newmarket, circa 1829 Oil on canvas, 40 x 51 inches

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28. HENRY ALKEN (British, 1810-1894) The Epsom Derby, 1880, “Bend Or” with Fred Archer up Beating “Robert the Devil” with Rossiter up Signed Oil on panel, 11 x 17 inches

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29. ISIDORE JULES BONHEUR (French, 1827-1901) Retour au Pesage Signed and stamped Peyrol Bronze; medium to dark brown patina, 21¼ x 24 x 7 inches

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30. ARTHUR-MARIE-GABRIEL, COMTE DU PASSAGE (French, 1838-1909) Racehorse and Groom, 1885 Signed, dated 1885 and inscribed Boudet Edt 43 Bld des Capucines Bronze; rich dark brown patina, 13 ½ x 24 x 7½ inches

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SIR ALFRED JAMES MUNNINGS, PRA Helter Skelter Provenance:

Exhibited:

Acquired from the artist and by descent in a British Private Collection

London, Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolours, 1911. no. 362.

Sale Bonhams, London, 20th Century British Art, July 11, 2006, lot #10

Middleburg, VA, National Sporting Library & Museum, 2013. no. 4.

Richard Green Gallery, London, 2006 Private Collection, Britain Red Fox Fine Art, Middleburg, Virginia Private American Collection, 2016 Helter Skelter showcases Munnings’ vigilant eye for capturing equine expression and movement. It is a masterpiece of observation presenting a medley of ponies cresting a hill in a frenzy of excitement. The name of this work clearly describes the scene. Ponies are driven forward by Munnings’ groom, Shrimp who shouts and waves a stick. The anxious ponies, panic in their eyes, clump together to flee the commotion. Like many artists, Munnings often painted a series of works with a common theme. For over a decade, he explored the subject of horses approaching the viewer in a three-quarter angle. Not only did this diagonal illustrate his faultless sense of perspective, it also tested his technical acumen of anatomy and understanding of the visual mechanics of equine motion. The earliest and largest picture from this series was The Vagabonds, painted in 1902, measuring 50 x 80 inches. In 1910

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Munnings painted another large oil, 30 x 43 inches, titled Coming Through the Gap, very close in many respects to the Helter Skelter watercolor of 1911. A comparison favors the watercolor which is bursting with color and energy. The white pony that lights up the center of Helter Skelter is probably Augereau, which Munnings bought from the gypsy horse dealer Drake earlier in his career. The use of a white pony or horse to provide a visual focus is a favorite motif of the artist in this series. Although Munnings exhibits extraordinary skill in the medium of watercolor, Helter Skelter is a relatively rare work in his oeuvre as he gave up the medium in the mid-1920s. We are grateful to Lorian Peralta-Ramos for kindly assisting in the cataloguing of this work, which will be included in her forthcoming catalog raisonné of Sir Alfred James Munnings, PRA.


31. SIR ALFRED JAMES MUNNINGS, PRA (British, 1878-1959) Helter Skelter Signed and dated 1911 Watercolor and gouache on paper, 16¾ x 20¾ inches

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32. JOHN WILLIS GOOD (British, 1845-1879) Huntsman Calling for Hounds and Whip Halloing, ‘Gone Away’ Both signed Silver plated bronze, 11½ x 11 x 4 inches

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33. JOHN WILLIS GOOD (British, 1845-1879) Huntsman and Hounds at the End, 1872 Signed and dated 1872 Bronze; rich brown patina, 12 x 22 ½ x 11Ÿ inches

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34. RANDALL VERNON DAVEY (American, 1887-1964) At the Races Signed Oil on masonite, 16 x 19¼ inches

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35. HENRY KOEHLER (American, b. 1927) Fontwell Starter Signed, inscribed as titled and dated 1976 verso Oil on canvas, 12 x 24 inches

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36. RENÉ PARIS (French, 1881-1970) A Set of Five Racing Bronzes, c.1924 Each signed RenÊ Paris Bronze; medium brown patina with dark brown undertones Each titled in order from left to right as pictured above: Two Years Old Canter (7 x10 inches), The Finish (6 x4 inches), The Start (7 x9 inches), Racehorse and Trainer (7 x 8 inches), Racehorse and Groom (6 x10 inches) Note: Each bronze is afixed to a black marble base, 3/4 inches thick, with lengths and widths varying from 9 to 3 inches. Casting Note: These bronzes were produced using the lost wax casting process prior to 1930.

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The Start

Racehorse and Groom

The Finish

Racehorse and Trainer

Two Years Old Canter

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37. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) Opening of Trout Season Signed and dated 31 Oil on canvas, 28 ½ x 30¼ inches

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38. ALBERT BIERSTADT (American, 1830-1902) Sportsmen in Canoes Signed Oil on paper laid down on panel, 14 x 193/8 inches

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39. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) The Outlet Pool Signed Watercolor on paper, 14½ x 21½ inches

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40. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) Salmon Fishing Signed Watercolor on paper, 21¾ x 27 inches

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FRANK W. BENSON Lower Camp Pool Provenance: Mr. Moreau Delano, West Orange, New Jersey Susan A. Delano, McKelvey, (sister of the above) New York & Boston Massachusetts, 1937 By bequest from the above to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 1964 Sale Christie’s, New York, Important American Paintings Drawings & Watercolors, May 18, 2004, lot #57 A Private American Collection until the present In Lower Camp Pool, painted in 1928, Benson has retained the light palette and Impressionist style that received wide acclaim earlier in his career. An avid sportsman and outdoorsman Benson painted fishing and hunting subjects throughout his lifetime. He demonstrated a deep appreciation for the natural world while interpreting the light and colors of his rural surroundings with skill and perception on a par with the work of Winslow Homer a generation before him. In 1895 the artist wrote to a friend “Salmon fishing seems to me the finest sport in the world” (F.A. Bedford, Frank W. Benson: American Impressionist, New York,1994, p.208) and in the late 1920s and early 1930s he frequented the salmon rivers of North America, creating an extraordinary group of oils and watercolors. “Some of Benson’s paintings of this period, especially his large oils, were often more landscape than figure study, more about nature than the people who inhabit it…the tiny man silhouetted against a patch of silver water is insignificant. His being is subordinated to the majesty of the looming mountain and the power of the swift stream.” (Frank W. Benson: American Impressionist, p. 200)

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Benson builds the composition in Lower Camp Pool with large blocks of color in cool hues, emphasizing the calmness of nature while giving the effect of early morning light shimmering off the surface of the water. He concentrates his painting on the total mood of the work rather than the figures, placing the fishermen in an expansive landscape with imposing mountains and towering trees drenched in light and shadow. Faith Andrews Bedford writes that “Benson was never happier than when he was outdoors. He worked hard and long to support organizations that fostered stewardship of the land and conservation of its resources.” (Frank W. Benson: American Impressionist, p.200) Lower Camp Pool typifies Benson’s highly personal imagery, bringing together Impressionist technique and sporting art at its best. The note above is drawn from Christie’s catalog entry of May 18, 2004. This work will be included in the forthcoming catalog raisonné being compiled by Vose Galleries of Boston.


41. FRANK W. BENSON (American, 1862-1951) Lower Camp Pool Signed and dated ‘28 Oil on canvas, 32 x 40 inches

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42. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) Heavy Water, St. John Signed Watercolor on paper, 19 x 30 inches

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43. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) Fisherman on the George Pool Signed Watercolor on paper, 18 x 28 inches

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44. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) Poling Up the York Signed Oil on canvas, 24 x 36 inches

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45. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) The Bridge Pool, Ballynahinch Signed Oil on canvas, 24 x 40 inches

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46. FRANK W. BENSON (American, 1862-1951) Ducks Coming In Signed and dated ‘31 Watercolor on paper, 20 x 24 inches

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47. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American 1905-1983) Carolina Marsh Signed Watercolor on paper, 7 x 10 inches

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48. FRANK W. BENSON (American, 1862-1951) Setting Out Signed and dated ‘26 Watercolor on paper, 18¾ x 24¾ inches

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49. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) Blue Bills Coming in to the Decoys Signed Watercolor on paper, 16 x 25 inches

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50. OGDEN M. PLEISSNER (American, 1905-1983) Duck Shooting Over Decoys Signed Watercolor on paper, 14 ½ x 21½ inches

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51. ROLAND CLARK (American, 1874-1957) Canvasbacks in Flight Signed Oil on canvas, 36 x 48¼ inches

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MONTAGUE DAWSON The Great Race - Ariel & Taeping Provenance: Frost & Reed, London, September 4, 1967 Acquired from the above and by descent until the present Tea was one of the very few commodities carried at speed in the heyday of sail. Other cargoes were either too bulky or insufficiently valuable to make it worth risking a whole ship and crew while racing through the typhoons and the shoals of the South China Sea with all sails set, just to be able to dock in the Port of London a few hours or days ahead of the pack. But in the middle of the 19th century, demand for fresh tea was such that the first vessel home from Fuzhou or Shanghai could command a premium of at least 10 percent for her wares. The flourishing of the China trade crowned centuries of trial and error with masts and sail. The power that a clipper could draw from a following wind with all sails set was far greater than anything that could be supplied from contemporary steam engines. A typical clipper ship of the late 1860s had three masts, each of which would be fitted (looking from the bottom up) with a lower course sail, double topsails, single or double topgallants, a royal and a skysail. Some captains, anxious to cram on every stitch of canvas, might also unfurl small sails known as moonrakers at the very tip of each mast, and add supplementary staysails and studding sails, as well as fancy racing canvas

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such as water sails close down along the waterline. A crack ship such as Ariel could easily set thirty or more sails in the most favorable conditions (some 25,000 feet of sailcloth), and any clipper taking part in the tea race might average 11 or 12 knots in reasonable conditions, at a time when the steam fleet made eight or nine knots and would need to stop for coal four or five times on a passage between Britain and China. The Great Tea Race of 1866 caused an enormous stir in the sporting and nautical circles of Britain and China. Every man with a nautical cut to his jib had bet upon the result while the rival owners, agents and shippers wagered huge sums. Ariel and Taeping had left Fuzho, China on the same tide, sailed over 14,000 miles in a race lasting 99 days, then docked in London on the same tide, with less than thirty minutes between them. Taeping docked 28 minutes before Ariel. This note is drawn in large part from the article The Great Tea Race of 1866 written by Mike Dash for the Smithsonian Magazine, December 15, 2011.


52. MONTAGUE DAWSON (British, 1890-1973) The Great Race - Ariel & Taeping Signed Oil on canvas, 40 x 50 inches

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SIR ALFRED JAMES MUNNINGS, PRA Withypool Landscape, Exmoor Provenance: Ian MacNicol, Glasgow from whom acquired by E. Franklin Robbins in October 1968 Williams & Co., London, by 1999 Nicholas Boler, Esq., England Sale Christie’s, New York Sporting Art, December 5, 2003, lot #120 Private Collection, Washington, D.C. to 2012, acquired at the above sale Red Fox Fine Art, Middleburg, VA Private Collection Charleston, SC, acquired from above 2013 While living on Exmoor during World War II, Munnings was inspired to capture the local landscape under the ever changing light conditions. He studied cloud formations and their light and shadowy effects on the landscape below. In his autobiography he writes of the inspiration that the Exmoor landscape provided, ‘Strong scents of phlox grown in masses of pink and white come through doors and windows. Such a breezy, bright morning, with clouds sailing over Withypool Hill opposite, is fatal to me,

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for I must be off on a horse. There are no flies on days like this. Am I losing hold on Suffolk and Norfolk? Is this wild country casting its net over me? Exmoor, with its storms of ‘untimely violence’ and its gales of wind and rain, can change its face and smile, resuming ‘God’s gentle, sleeping peace,’ so that in the end everybody would stay if they could, or come again as they do.’ (Sir A.J. Munnings, An Artist’s Life, Bungay, 1950, p. 87)


53. SIR ALFRED JAMES MUNNINGS, PRA (British, 1878-1959) Withypool Landscape, Exmoor Signed, painted circa 1940-44 Oil on panel, 20 x 24 inches

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54. ARTHUR BURDETT FROST (American, 1851-1928) A Sportsman and Setter: The Shooting Pictures Portfolio Frontispiece Illustration Signed Pen and ink on paper, 14 x 18 inches

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Index Alken, Henry The Epsom Derby, 1880, “Bend Or” with Fred Archer up Beating “Robert the Devil” with Rossiter up (Plate 28) Benson, Frank W. Lower Camp Pool (Plate 41) Ducks Coming In (Plate 46) Setting Out (Plate 48) Bierstadt, Albert Sportsmen in Canoes (Plate 38) Browne, George Quail in the Pine Lands, 1956 (Plate 23) Bonheur, Isidore Jules Retour au Pesage (Plate 29) Caillebotte, Gustave Trois Perdrix sur une Table (Plate 12) Clark, Roland Canvasbacks in Flight (Plate 51) Dawson, Montague The Great Race - Ariel & Taeping (Plate 52) Davey, Randall Vernon At the Races (Plate 34) Degas, Edgar Cheval faisant une descente de main, 1865-1881 (Plate 26) Frost, Arthur Burdett Still Life of Hanging Ducks (Plate 11) Good Shot and Good Dog (Plate 13) A Sportsman and Setter: The Shooting Pictures Portfolio Frontispiece Illustration (Plate 54) Good, John Willis Huntsman Calling for Hounds and Whip Halloing, ‘Gone Away’ (Plate 32) Huntsman and Hounds at the End, 1872 (Plate 33) Haseltine, Herbert Suffolk Punch, 1929 (Plate 1)

Koehler, Henry Fontwell Starter (Plate 35) Marshall, Benjamin Zinganee, Held by Sam Chifney, Jr. Wearing Lord Chesterfield’s Colors After Winning the Oatlands Stakes, Newmarket, circa 1829 (Plate 27) Munnings, Sir Alfred James, PRA Under Starter’s Orders, Newmarket (Plate 25) Helter Skelter (Plate 31) Withypool Landscape, Exmoor (Plate 53) Muss-Arnolt, Gustave Pointers in a Landscape (Plate 20) Osthaus, Edmund Henry A Setter Retrieving a Quail (Plate 14) Paris, René A Set of Five Racing Bronzes, c. 1924 (Plate 36)

Ripley, Aiden Lassel Late Season Quail Shooting (Plate 15) Covey Rise (Plate 16) Rosseau, Percival Leonard A Brace on Point (Plate 17) Setters in a Landscape (Plate 18) Setters on Birds (Plate 21) Morning: Setters on Point (Plate 24) Tait, Arthur Fitzwilliam Quail and Young (Plate 19) Tracy, John Martin In the Grouse Woods (Plate 9) In Quail Country (Plate 10) Wardle, Arthur Setters on the Moor (Plate 8) Wright, George On the Moor – Walking up (Plate 5)

Passage, Arthur-Marie-Gabriel, Comte du Racehorse and Groom, 1885 (Plate 30) Pautrot, Ferdinand Gun Dogs and Game, a pair (Plate 22) Pleissner, Ogden M. Grouse Shooting (Plate 2) Edge of the Cotton Field, Quail Shooting (Plate 3) The Covey Rise (Plate 4) Driven Grouse, Perthshire (Plate 6) A High Shot, Perthshire (Plate 7) Opening of Trout Season (Plate 37) The Outlet Pool (Plate 39) Salmon Fishing (Plate 40) Heavy Water, St. John (Plate 42) Fisherman on the George Pool (Plate 43) Poling Up the York (Plate 44) The Bridge Pool, Ballynahinch (Plate 45) Carolina Marsh (Plate 47) Blue Bills Coming in to the Decoys (Plate 49) Duck Shooting Over Decoys (Plate 50)

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Opposite: OGDEN M. PLEISSNER, (detail) Plate 39


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American & European Paintings from the 18th – 21st Centuries www.peterlvillafineart.com

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