"Monitor" Signed and dated 1821
Oil on canvas | 81.5 x 110.6 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external) | RCIN 405017
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Ward was a successful animal painter who gives his horses a nervous, highly-strung character often supported by an intense and dramatic landscape background. Ward was appointed Painter and Engraver in Mezzotint to the Prince of Wales in 1794 and executed engravings after works in the collection for George III. There are only three paintings in the collection, horse portraits of identical dimensions, commissioned by George IV at a cost of 100 guineas each and executed in 1821 and 1824. It is difficult to say how connected the three paintings were; George IV often commission groups of similar paintings without apparently considering exactly how they might pair off. Two of the Wards, including this one, were together at Windsor in 1878 (OM 1135-6, 405017-8), while the third was at Stud Lodge (OM 1137, 402008), but they may have been a set of three which had become separated.
Monitor was foaled in 1815 and was raced by the Duke of Leeds, George IV's Master of the Horse. This chestnut horse appears here standing in a landscape, with an extraordinary pattern of highlights playing over his glossy coat. There are two horses chasing sheep in the background, one of which looks like another view of Monitor.
Signed and dated: 'JWARD RA. 1821'Provenance
Painted for George IV, who paid 100 guineas for it in 1825; recorded in the Master of the Household's Room (Room no 545) at Windsor Castle in 1878
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Creator(s)
(nationality) -
Medium and techniques
Oil on canvas
Measurements
81.5 x 110.6 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external)
108.6 x 137.1 x 11.0 cm (frame, external)