拍品專文
The present example, called the Stewards' Cup, was one of three major trophies presented to the winners of the "Glorious Goodwood" races of 1865. The Illustrated London News, on 3 August 1865, included a rendering of the present example, with the caption "Robin Hood Winding the Morte." The ILN describes the "spirited and lifelike" Robin Hood, "sounding a blast of triumph...for the information of their belated comrades in the chase."
Designed by Harrison Weir (1824-1906), a distinguished naturalist painter and illustrator, and modeled by W. Spencer, this trophy is part of a tradition of oversized, highly sculptural Victorian silver horse racing trophies. For example, the Royal Hunt Cup, Ascot, 1884, also depicts Robin Hood and his band of Merry Men following a stag hunt. It is illustrated in the Glory of the Goldsmith: Magnificent Gold and Silver from the Al-Tajir Collection, 1989, p. 230, no. 178.
Designed by Harrison Weir (1824-1906), a distinguished naturalist painter and illustrator, and modeled by W. Spencer, this trophy is part of a tradition of oversized, highly sculptural Victorian silver horse racing trophies. For example, the Royal Hunt Cup, Ascot, 1884, also depicts Robin Hood and his band of Merry Men following a stag hunt. It is illustrated in the Glory of the Goldsmith: Magnificent Gold and Silver from the Al-Tajir Collection, 1989, p. 230, no. 178.