Constance-Anne Parker, Mr. Stubbs, the horse painter., J. A. Allen, London, 1971, pp. 72-82, NJ18 St915 P37 (YCBA) +

Mr Stubbs The horse Painter
George Stubbs: Art, Animals and Anatomy
Parker, Constance-Anne
Published by J. A. Allen(1984)

George Stubbs: Art, Animals & Anatomy

Constance-Anne Parker. Retrospective Exhibition of Sculpture 1947-1977 Paperback – 1977 by

Royal Academy of Arts Cookery Book Spiral-bound – 1 Nov 1981

Anatomy of the Horse Paperback – 24 Aug 2005
This edition reproduces all Stubbs’ etchings and is taken from the 1853 printing, the last to use Stubbs’ original plates. Including a full text of Stubbs’ commentary. George Stubbs (1724-1806) was one of the most original artists Britain has produced. Such is the present reputation of his paintings, with their astonishingly convincing portraits of both animals and people, that it is easy to forget how much his success was based on rigorous scientific observation. In 1756 he rented an out-of-the-way farmhouse where he erected a special scaffolding to hold the cadavers of horses as he dissected and drew. (It is said that he had a particularly strong stomach when it came to smells.) After eighteen months of single-minded dedication Stubbs produced the drawings for the “Anatomy of the Horse”, which he later etched himself. The result was a sensation. Letters of congratulation coming from scientists from all over Europe, amazed not only at the perfection of the finished work, but that it had been produced privately, without any patronage. The “Anatomy” remained a textbook for artists and scientists for well over a century, and to this day the strange, spare beauty of the horse.
A number of catalogues from Constance Anne Parker’s Retrospective Exhibition of Sculpture 1947-1977, which took place at the Belgrave Gallery 11th January to 18th February 1977, together with a quantity of photographs of her works in sculpture etc.
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