- James Seymour
James Seymour (1702,
London –1752) was an English painter, widely recognized for his equestrianart .Seymour's father was an amateur artist and art dealer himself. His father's other business dealings (as a banker, goldsmith, and diamond merchant) afforded young Seymour the leisure time to study art on his own, either his father's or the art at the Virtuosi Club of St. Luke - a gentleman's club his father belonged to, specializing in art. In a short time the boy was a self-taught artist, familiar with many of the prominent artists of the period.
Seymour's love of art was matched only by his love of
horse s. He began spending time at racetracks early on, and before long found himself absorbed in the sport - drawing, painting, owning, breeding, and racing horses. His art proved popular among the prominent sporting families of the day, eventually garnering Seymour patrons inSir William Jolliffe andCharles Seymour, 6th Duke of Somerset . Jolliffe's love for horses and art proved great, and his will would later establish an equestrian statue inHampshire . In time, Seymour's work and fame had spread throughoutEurope and America.Though ultimately his love for horseracing led to his financial ruin, Seymour still ranks among the most important early sporting artists.
External links
* http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/seymour_james.html
* [http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/opac/search/cataloguesummary.html?_searchstring_=(maker='Seymour,%20James')&_limit_=50&_function_=xslt&_resultstylesheet_=imagecs]
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