Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Adriaen van de Venne - horse fair

 Salvete Omnes,



This work by Adriaen van de Venne (1589-1662) offers a quick glimpse into the world of Dutch horse market day back in the XVII century.
The painting is located at Rijks Museum in Netherlands. 



so prince Maurice and Frederick Henry, who appeared in this post on my blog,  arrived at the Valkenburg Horse Fair - in Valkenburg, South Holland. 



And the horsetrading and horsing around started :) ; the painting is full of amazing period detail and Dutch horse culture elements

a splendid palomino - perhaps Spanish horse










..

wagon drivers?

a gray horse with a page boy - fully outfitted riding horse and his gentleman standing near by



Nota bene look how many  youngsters are in these images - unlike in the period films made nowadays

enjoy
Valete

Sunday, September 24, 2023

Hans Suess von Kulmbach - armored knights, horses, early hussar and stradiots lancers

 Salvete Omnes,



a little canter to early XVI century Polish ream where Northern Renaissance art life flourished in the old capital, in and around the royal court of Sigimund I Jagiellon. 

Apart from Michal Lancz there was another early painter in Polish Kingdom who also painted early hussars, stradiots and Rac, and knights and saints.

Northern Renaissance painter Hans Suess von Kulmbach was a prolific painter and draughtsman

In the old Limbach's church, nowadays a Lutheran Church, there is a surviving altar with his painting showing four military saints in period plate and chain armor-  




During the period of 1509-15 he was active in Krakow (Cracow), but returned to Nuremberg, where he died in 1522AD. He painted figures that resemble Rac or stradiots of the period. 


and the Adoration of Magi, in full glory at the top of this post,  is a mine to be explored

period bridle and curb-bit a a detail of the saddle's pommel


straditot and Rac lancers, ahorse with a curb bit

rowel spurs, langes messer and a stradiot attire

rowel spurs 



There is a painting at the old town of Sandomierz - Diocesan Museum. Probably painted in master Hans Suess' workshop in Krakow. But it closely follows the original master Hans' work.  Again, Rac lancers, stradiots and perhaps even Tatars (in those felt or sheep-skin  conical hats) . My thanks to Radoslaw Sikora for allowing me to use his photo of the said painting.


a sabre 

Polish bridle?  a curb-bit and double reins
lancers, their hussar lances with lively pennons 

more lancers and horsemen, including one Tatar handling the camel, a and 2 Tatars with arrow quiver? 

enjoy

Valete

Thursday, September 21, 2023

XV century cavalry charge ..at Brandenburg Castle, Lauchröden

 Salvete Omnes,

a quick post - but amazing video and event

scan from the video recording by Iron Crown Workshop


Ecuyer and chivalry reenactor  Arne Koets and many fine reenactors of the European Medieval chivalry gathered at Lauchroden, Germany and it resulted in this recording: a XV century cavalry charge reenacted.


The camp was called Feldlager at the Brandenburg, Lauchröden and many reenactors from Poland also came, what is why you are seeing the flag -White Eagle on the red field - of our Polish Masovian Piast dukes in the second row of the charging knights. 



XIV century Armorial de Gelre, foilio 52 shows our king's Louis of Hungary coat of arms and some of our Polish Piast dukes coats of arms, including the White Eagle of duke Siemowit IV of Mazowsze (Mazovia) - he was prince of the Rawa Land, my country...and he should have been our king and not the Lithuanian pagan  aka Wladyslaw Jagiellon.  Nota bene duke Rupert of Legnica was married to Jadwiga of Zagan, the widow of our king Kazimierz Wielki and mother of his 3 daughters who were not allowed to inherit our Kingdom, and the dukes Ruper and Jadwiga  had 2 daughters. 

Photographer Jan Stabl has an album on his page where you can see and admire the reencators from this 2023 Feldlager. Also Bertus Brokamp made some very fine photos available - nota bene on Bertus' page you can see the reconstruction of the leather bard ( horse armor) and many finest points of chivalrous reconstruction and reenactment, like jousting. Burgine site also has photos to beheld and enjoy.

Hail to the chivalry and reenactors! 




Enjoy

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Stockholm Roll / Rolka Polska - scans from Warsaw Royal Castle collection

Salvete Omnes,

king astride a chestnut horse


I am happy to provide this newest event in the saga* of the Rolka Polska or Stockholm Roll frieze-like painting on paper -  a gouache work of art circa 1605 AD, that was painted in the aftermath of the nuptials of our king Zygmunt III with the imperial princes Konstanza (Konstancja/Constance - known for the privilegium de non tolerandis Judaeis in her estates ) of Austria, and their triumphal entry into the Old Capital, i.e. Krakow.
We see a display of horsemanship, bejeweled arms and armor, and horse tack, painted horses, variety of horse tack (Italian perhaps and Polish and Eastern i.e., Ottoman and Crimean and Transylvanian ), variety of splendid costumes - Polish, Spanish and Italian and Eastern (Ottoman, Muscovy, Persian etc) . 

future queen of Polish Crown - princess Konstanza of Austria, her mother Archduchess Maria Anna of Bavaria, her sister Maria Christina, and princess Anna Vasa of Sweden.
















Polish infantry - drummer with a white eagle drum 

king's ecuyer on a bay horse



                                                                           and the future king Wladyslaw IV - 10 years old at that time 

young prince on a gray horse 



Link to the Royal Castle Museum portal in English / here Polish .

But Wiki Commons has some great scans from Swedish Royal Armory - here's the link

enjoy

Valete

*Rolka was painted for the king and his wife and their family and court, and in 1655 (during the Deluge) the special Swedish art commando while robbing valuables and even marble architectural  elements from the Royal Castle took the Roll to Sweden, and it was stored at the Livrustkammern, Sweden having violated the return of cultural treasures' condition  specified in the treaty of Oliwa 1660. In 1960s some Polish & Swedish historians started collaborating on a book publication about the Polonica (Polish and Poland related  objects taken from Poland during the Polish-Swedish wars) in the Swedish collections and the Roll was included. In 1969 Sweden allowed for the Roll to travel to Poland for the exhibition, and in 1974 Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme, while visiting Poland, returned officially the Roll to Poland, directly to the collection of then newly restored from the World War II German barbarity our Royal Castle at Warsaw. 

Sunday, September 17, 2023

Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait - 'creating' Western images while in NY studio

Salvete Omnes,

Check -keep your distance


just a short entry  on this British-American painter's equestrian works - 
Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait was born in Liverpool, UK in 1819, 4 years after the Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812 ended and the Latin America's wars for independence from Spain were about to start. 



Mr Tait was self-trained in painting, lithography and drawing, having lived on a farm in teh Liverpool countryside, then working from his Manchester's studio and then back at Liverpool. He painted his first known oil-on-canvas  portrait of a thoroughbred horse in 1848. He might have met George Catlin in 1842, when Catlin opened his [American] Indian show at the Mechanic's Institute in Liverpool; later on his son claimed that Tait had joined Catlin's troupe of painted Englishmen dressed in Pains Indian costume during 1842-3 sojourn in that part of UK.  In  short he must have caught the bug of entertainment, wanderlust  and perhaps plenty of curiosity about America, just one ocean away.
In 1850 Mr Tait emigrated to America and soon started painting hunting scenes - game stalking, bird shooting and deer hunting, as wild country was aplenty in upstate New York or New Jersy wilds.
He befriended one William Ranney, who was working out of his Hoboken studio and exhibiting at the same art-supplies and prints business of Williams, Stevens and Williams in NY, NY.  It was  Bill Ranney, veteran of the Mexican War and Texas Indian wars, and wanderer in the West, who provided the necessary props and gear needed for Tait's Western genre paintings creation, and in 1851 our Arthur Fitzwilliam painted his first known Western genre painting -  On the Warpath.  He submitted a number of paintings or the annual exhibit at the National Academy of Design and his career as a Western painter had sailed the 'port of his studio'  so to speak. 

Prairie hunter  - a flying gallop of the period  and enigmatic Indian riders in the background



The Western painting and lithography period was not too long, but fruitful and helped maestro Arthur to establish himself within the NY art world.

this one clearly is due to Catlin's own images of the Comanche horsemanship


Mr Tait was creating his compositions out of other artists' work but in process created his own version of the dangerous Western life, the trappers and distant hostile native warriors or wild elements. We should note that this period coincided with the beginning of  publication of many literary about the West  written by trappers and travelers - like Rufus Sage's Scenes in the Rocky Mountains. 


With the coming of the Civil War the scenes of Western life were not much in demand, but for two more years our maestro painted them (eg this Amon Carter Museum piece), and thus slowly Arthur Tait turned to painting and producing lithographs  of more tranquil hunting scenes from the mountains,  marshes and lakes of the Old Northwest and eastern shores, aka Adirondacks Mountains and New Jersey Marshes, and  in his later years painted simply bucolic images of farm animals and tranquil wildlife etc. 

the Hunt from Currier & Ives printing company


 You can read the factual critique of Tait's western painting in Bernard de Voto's Across the Wide Missouri, or  John Ewers' Fact and Fiction in Documentary Art of the American West (in this book)

Valete