Ben Marshall (1767-1835)
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price plus bu… Read more
Ben Marshall (1767-1835)

A gentleman with a bay hunter and terrier in a landscape

Details
Ben Marshall (1767-1835)
A gentleman with a bay hunter and terrier in a landscape
oil on canvas
33 x 39¼ in. (83.9 x 99.7 cm.)
Provenance
with Arthur Ackermann & Son, Ltd., London.
Anon. sale, Christie's, New York, 4 June 1982, lot 249, (sold $21,780).
Exhibited
London, Basil Dighton, 3 Savile Row, Old Sporting Prints, 1913, no. 121, illustrated as frontispiece (one of two oil paintings are in the exhibition).
London, Arthur Ackermann & Son, Ltd., Annual Exhibition of Sporting Paintings, 1982, no. 38.
Special notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price plus buyer's premium

Lot Essay

Stylistically this painting can be compared with Marshall's Portrait of the Hon. Peniston Lamb with his horse Assasin and dog Tanner illustrated in colour as the frontispiece of Walter Shaw Sparrow's George Stubbs and Ben Marshall, (London, 1929). That work, long given to Stubbs, is neither signed nor dated, but also shows in Lamb's portrait the influence of Lemuel Francis Abbott, to whom Marshall had been apprenticed between 1791 and 1794.

No dated Marshall is recorded before 1796 and the early horse portraits known from engravings in The Sporting Magazine do not show the ability of the present work. It is therefore likely that this painting and the Peniston Lamb portrait can be dated between 1797 and 1799 when the fine portrait of Diamond (Paul Mellon Collection, Yale Center of British Art) was painted.

More from Sporting Art

View All
View All