Misplaced Pages

Horse and Rider (Frink)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Sculpture by Elisabeth Frink in London

The statue in London

Horse and Rider (FCR 242) is a 1974 bronze equestrian sculpture by Elisabeth Frink. The work was commissioned for a site in Mayfair; another cast is in Winchester. It was described by Frink as "an ageless symbol of man and horse".

One of Frink's earliest sculptures from 1950 was also titled Horse and Rider, and she returned to this subject over decades. A series of Frink prints from the early 1970s held by the Tate Gallery depict a horse and rider.

Frink lived in southern France in 1967 to 1970, near the Camargue. She was inspired to create more works portraying horses; an example of a similar horse sculpture from the early 1970s is at the Cass Sculpture Foundation.

The work was commissioned in 1974 by Trafalgar House for its development at the southern end of Dover Street, London, near the junction with Piccadilly, opposite The Ritz. It was modelled in plaster at Frink's studio in Southwark then cast in bronze in 1975 at Meridian Bronze Foundry in Peckham. It measures 244 centimetres (96 in) high. Frink also cast a small version 34.3 centimetres (13.5 in), in an edition of nine in 1974.

The sculpture depicts a man riding on a horse, naked and barefoot, without tack – no saddle, bridle, or other riding equipment. The man's right hand rests on the horse's stylised mane, with his left hand resting on the horse's left flank. The horse is standing still on four legs, ready to walk, on a rough bronze base. The figures of man and horse are slightly stylised, with lightly defined musculature; the horse has a short mane and tail. Both have their heads turned to their left, as if looking at something.

The statue in Winchester

The work was installed in Mayfair in 1975, mounted on a granite plinth. It is part of an edition of three; another cast is in Winchester. The example in London became a Grade II listed building in September 2015. In June 2018 the sculpture was moved to the Town Square on Bond Street to mark the new entrance to the Royal Academy of Arts.

References

  1. Historic England, "Horse and Rider sculpture (1429315)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 27 June 2017
Elisabeth Frink
Sculptures
Related
Public art and memorials in London
Portrait sculpture
British/English
royalty
Arts
Explorers
Merchants
Military
Nurses
Politics
British
Prime ministers
Other politicians
International
Religion
Science and
engineering
Social reformers
and humanitarians
Sport
Fictional
characters
See also
Other monuments and memorials
War memorials
Pre-C20
Boer Wars
WWI · WWII
Regimental
Local
Corporate
Holocaust
Post-WWII
Blue plaques
Other works
Sculptures
Fourth plinth, Trafalgar Square
Elisabeth Frink
Barbara Hepworth
Henry Moore
Eduardo Paolozzi
The Line
Fountains
Murals
Banksy
Land art
See also
By location
City of Westminster
  • Partly in Kensington and Chelsea
  • Partly in Camden
  • Partly in the City of London
Key: † No longer extant, on public display or in London (see List of public art formerly in London· ‡ Changing displays
Portals:

51°30′34.37″N 0°8′29.25″W / 51.5095472°N 0.1414583°W / 51.5095472; -0.1414583

Categories: