J.G. Shaddick, the Celebrated Sportsman
1806
Painter, British, 1768 - 1835


West Building Main Floor, Gallery 59
Artwork overview
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Medium
oil on canvas
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Credit Line
-
Dimensions
overall: 240 x 148 cm (94 1/2 x 58 1/4 in.)
framed: 263.2 x 171.5 cm (103 5/8 x 67 1/2 in.) -
Accession
1999.79.24
Artwork history & notes
Provenance
Possibly Mr. Payne, Walton-on-Thames.[1] (sale, Christie, Manson & Woods, London, 28 February 1891, no. 78); (Vokins). E.M. Denny, London; (his estate sale, Christie, Manson & Woods, 31 March 1906, no. 41); (Vokins).[2] Viscount Enfield. Earl of Stratford, Wrotham Park, Barnet, Hertfordshire. A.S. Cochran, London;[3] (his sale, Christie, Manson & Woods, London, 13 February 1920, no. 144); Basil Lewis Dighton, Esq. [d. 1930], London, until at least 1922.[4] Arthur S. Vernay, London, by 1927 until at least 1938.[5] C. Frederick C. Stout, Ardmore, Pennsylvania, by 1941.[6] (M. Knoedler & Co., Inc., New York), in 1965.[7] Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon, Upperville, Virginia; bequest 1999 to NGA.
[1] This name appears in the catalogue of a 1941 exhibition in New York that included the painting, and again, with the city added, in Judy Egerton, British Sporting and Animal Paintings 1655-1867, London, 1978 [1979]: 197-198.
[2] Vokins is identified as the buyer at both the 1891 and the 1906 sales in annotated auction atalogues in the NGA Library, copies in NGA curatorial files.
[3] The names of Enfield, Stratford, and Cochran appear in the catalogue of the 1941 exhibition at The Century Club, with Cochran's ownership coming before that of the Earl of Stratford. Egerton 1978, 197, put the names in the order given here, and adds a question mark to the Earl's name.
[4] The Times (14 February 1920): 17, reported that the painting was sold to Dighton. The painting was noted as owned by him when it was reproduced in a Country Life supplement to the issue of 15 July 1922. It was not included in a 4 May 1925 sale of some of Dighton's collection at Christie's, London.
[5] Vernay is noted as the owner by H.A. Bryden, "Four Sporting Pieces," Country Life (7 May 1927): 743, and Walter Shaw Sparrow, "Ben Marshall's Centenary," The Connoisseur 95, no. 402 (February 1935): 61. He lent the painting to a 1938 exhibition in Washington, D.C.
[6] Stout lent the painting to the 1941 exhibition in New York. A photograph dated 15 May 1945 in the Gottscho-Schleisner Collection, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress, shows the painting hanging in the upper hall of the Stout house, above what appears to be a mezzotint by Henry Macbeth-Raeburn after the painting.
[7] Egerton 1978, 197.
Associated Names
Exhibition History
1806
Annual Exhibition, Royal Academy of Arts, London, 1806, no. 292.
1938
Sporting Paintings from 1700 to 1937, Museum of Modern Art Gallery, Washington, D.C., 1938, unnumbered brochure, repro. on cover.
1941
Outdoor England, The Century Club, New York, 1941, no. 8.
Bibliography
1922
Country Life (Supplement to 15 July 1922): liii, repro.
1948
"A Ben Marshall Picture." Apollo (June 1948): 142.
1978
Noakes, Aubrey. Ben Marshall 1768-1835. Leigh-on-Sea, 1978: 38, no. 85.
Wikidata ID
Q20182090