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lüder h. niemeyer

- since 1959 -

 

The  Stag  at  Bay

The  Famous  ,  the  Downright  Legendary  Sujet

Landseer R.A., Sir Edwin (1802 London 1873). The Stag at Bay. Imperial stag of 14 points with wonderful mane in the shallow water at the lakeside. One of the hounds beaten back lying on his back, the other barking from secure distance. At the right rocky lakeside with trees, on the left and in the background the calm Scottish Loch in the Highland stretching to the horizon below dark clouds. Chalk lithograph after Sir Edwin in reverse for S. Lipschitz, Hamburg + London. Ca. 1865. Inscribed: Verlag von S. Lipschitz. Ellernthorsbrücke 11. Hamburg / London, published by S. Lipschitz. 84. Brushfield St. Bishopsgate, otherwise as above. 45 x 55.8 cm.

The  Sovereign

Edwin Landseer, Stag at Bay

Or  how  to  deal  with  Attackers

as

one  of  the  most  wanted  highland  Landseer’s

on light uncut cardboard of fine wide margins (52.9 x 68 cm sheet size). – A small tear in the right paper margin backed acid-freely, equally a small tear in the white lower margin. At the back traces of previous framing.

Sir Edwin’s, son of the engraver John Landseer, career began at the age of 13 when the Royal Academy, whose presidency he later rejected, arranged the first exhibition. From the 16 years old Sir George Beaumont, leading connoisseur of the time, purchased the Fighting Dogs getting wind. And already the 24 years old was selected member of the Royal Academy.

“ (H)enceforth  found  abundant  patrons

for  his  portraits  of  dogs , deer , wild  animals … .”

1826 first voyage to Scotland where he also portrayed Sir Walter Scott, highly esteemed by Goethe, with his hounds, followed by further, especially for stalking the stag,

“ but  was  regarded  with  amazement  by  the  Highland  ghillies

when  he  threw  down  his  gun  and  started  drawing  an  approaching  stag ”.

His success, crowned by the admiration by the great Victoria, found its outward expression in the acceptance of the ennoblement in 1850. It was based on

“ anatomical  observation , combined  with  the  skilful  rendering  of  hair  and  fur ,

saves  his  animal  paintings  from  mere  sentimentality ”.

Accordingly Sir Walter Scott noted in his diary “Landseer’s dogs were the most magnificent things I ever saw – leaping , bounding and grinning on the canvas”.

All this reflected by the lithograph here with its finest chiaroscuro. The pendant, his Chieftain in Danger, sold here in the early 90s.

His leaving of this world took place by state funeral in St. Paul’s Cathedral, the lions on Trafalgar Square sculpted by him were covered in black.

Quotes after Judy Egerton, British Sporting and Animal Paintings / The Paul Mellon Collection, 1978, p. 324, in reference of Scott’s quote by recourse on Judy Hague, Landseer and his World, the exhibition catalogue of the Mappin Art Gallery, Sheffield, 1972, p. 5).
Offer no. 14,495 / EUR  808. / Export price EUR  768. (c. US$ 1163.) + shipping

 


 

“ Thank you Mr. Niemeyer – I will take it! … It should look very nice in my new office. Best regards ”

(Mr. J. R. L., January 6, 2006)

 

The  Cream  of  the  Day