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   » » Wiki: Animal Painter
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An animal painter is an artist who specialises in (or is known for their skill in) the portrayal of animals.

The OED dates the first express use of the term "animal painter" to the mid-18th century: by English , and writer (1726–1791). From the early 20th century, wildlife artist became a more usual term for contemporary animal painters.


History
Especially in the 17th century, animal painters would often collaborate with other artists, who would either paint the main subject in a or mythological piece, or the landscape background in a decorative one. , a founder of the Baroque animal painting tradition, often provided the animals, and also still lifes of food, for Peter Paul Rubens; a different landscape specialist might provide the background. The paintings by Snyders and his workshop alone typically lack humans, except in kitchen scenes, and usually show a number of animals of different species (or breeds of dog). There are about equal numbers of paintings of dead animals, usually in a kitchen setting or as hunting trophies in a landscape, and of live ones, often in ferocious combat.

In the Dutch Golden Age such specialists tended to produce smaller genre paintings concentrating on their specialism. Animal painters came lower down in the hierarchy of genres, but the best painters could make a very good living; many royal and aristocratic patrons were more interested in their subject matter than that of the more prestigious genres. Mainly in England, there were still more specialised painters from the 18th century who produced portraits of racehorses and prize specimens of livestock, whereas in France animal subjects continued to be decorative capriccios often set around garden statuary.

In 2014 Jonathan Jones of proposed The Goldfinch (1654) by (1622–1654) as the finest animal portrait; this was not the artist's normal subject matter at all.


Animalier
, as a collective plural noun, is a term used in for small-scale sculptures of animals in particular (animalier bronzes), but also paintings of animals. Large numbers of these were produced - often mass-produced - in the 19th century in France and elsewhere. Many earlier examples can be found, but sculpture became more popular, and reputable, in early 19th century Paris, with the works of Antoine-Louis Barye (1795–1875) - for whom the term was coined, decisively, by critics in 1831 - and Christopher Fratin (1801-1864). By the mid-19th century, a taste for animal subjects was widespread among the middle-classes.


Wildlife conservation
Many modern wildlife artists or art groups hold benefits to support wildlife conservation, or participate in contests held by wildlife conservation organisations.


Notable animal painters

Before 1800
  • Francis Barlow (c. 1626–1704)
  • Jan Brueghel the Elder (1568–1625)
  • Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione (1609–1664)
  • Nicasius Bernaerts (1620–1678)
  • (1626–1674)
  • Peter van Boucle (between 1600 & 1610–1673)
  • (1728–1798)
  • David de Coninck (c. 1644–1701+)
  • Marmaduke Cradock (1660–1716)
  • Thomas Davies (c. 1737–1812)
  • Alexandre-François Desportes (1661–1743)
  • (1622–1678)
  • C. G. Finch-Davies (1875–1920)
  • (1611–1661)
  • (1760–1826)
  • (1733–1807)
  • Melchior d'Hondecoeter (c. 1636–1695)
  • (1756/57–1822)
  • Jean-Baptiste Huet (1745–1811)
  • Jan Baptiste de Jonghe (1785–1844)
  • (1747–1795)
  • (1763–1804)
  • Balthasar Paul Ommeganck (1755–1826)
  • Jean-Baptiste Oudry (1686–1755)
  • (1625–1654)
  • (1749–1833)
  • (1576–1639)
  • James Seymour (1702–1752)
  • Charles Loraine Smith (1751–1835)
  • (1579–1657)
  • (1724–1806)
  • Charles Towne (1763–1840)
  • Jacob Xavier Vermoelen (c. 1714–1784)
  • Paul de Vos (1591/92 or 1595–1678), brother of Cornelis de Vos and brother-in-law of Frans Snyders
  • James Ward (1769–1859), brother-in-law of George Morland
  • (between 1640 & 1649–1719)
  • (c. 1682–1764)


After 1800
  • Henry Thomas Alken (1785–1851)
  • (1815–1885)
  • John James Audubon (1875–1851)Plain, Nancy This Strange Wilderness: The Life and Art of John James Audubon. University of Nebraska Press, 2015.
  • Charles Burton Barber (1845–1894)
  • (1780–1831)
  • Henry Barraud (1811–1874); his son, (1856–1924), painted "Nipper" the dog on the "His Master's Voice" painting
  • (1822–1899)
  • John Boultbee (1753–1812)
  • (1787–1876)
  • (1787–1868)
  • Thomas Sidney Cooper (1803–1902)
  • Horatio Henry Couldery (1832–1918)
  • John Dalby (1810–1865)
  • (1775–1811)
  • Eugène Delacroix (1798–1863)
  • (1862–1942)
  • John Henry Dolph (1835–1903)
  • John Emms (1844–1912)
  • (1878–1959)
  • Frederick William Frohawk (1861–1946)
  • (1804–1881)
  • Roland Green (1890/6–1972)
  • Harry Hall (c. 1814–1882)
  • Charles Hancock (c. 1800–1877)
  • (1842–1933)
  • John Frederick Herring Jr. (1820–1907)
  • John Frederick Herring Sr. (1795–1865)
  • William Huggins (1820–1884)
  • (1813–1894)
  • (1869–1958)
  • Frederick William Keyl (1823–1871)
  • (1861–1950)
  • Charles R. Knight (1874–1953)
  • (1865–1926)
  • (1802–1873)
  • (1860–1931)
  • George Edward Lodge (1860–1954)
  • (1858–1923)
  • (1825–1896)
  • John Guille Millais (1865–1931)
  • Sir (1878–1959)
  • Ramsay Richard Reinagle (1775–1862)
  • Jan Hendrik Scheltema (1861–1941)
  • Prideaux John Selby (1788–1867)
  • (1883–1969)
  • Christopher Webb Smith (1793–1871)
  • Charles Tunnicliffe (1901–1979)
  • (1860–1949)
  • Herbert William Weekes (1841–1914)


Modern
Modern wildlife art painters include:

Forerunners of modern wildlife art sculpture include:

  • Rembrandt Bugatti (1884–1916)
  • François Pompon (1855–1933)

Modern wildlife art sculptors include:


Gallery
File:Snyders Dogs fighting.jpg| Dogs fighting by , who probably left the landscape background to another kind of specialist. File:Edwards' Dodo.jpg| Edwards's (1626) by ; Natural History Museum, London. File:A sparrow. Engraving by P. Tempest, ca. 1690, after F. Barlo Wellcome V0022146.jpg| A sparrow (c. 1690) by Francis Barlow; engraving by . File:Jan Weenix 003.jpg|A typical composition of dead game from 1692 by , probably an for a country house. File:Gulliver-taking-his-final-leave-of-the-land-of-the-houyhnhnms-sawrey-gilpin.jpg|'s Gulliver taking his final leave of the land of the Houyhnhnms (1769). File:Birds of Prey, Goats and a Wolf, in a Landscape by Philip Reinagle.jpg|'s Birds of Prey, Goats and a Wolf, in a Landscape. File:Morland Dogs.jpg|'s Dogs (1792); , . File:Young tiger playing with its mother.jpg|Eugène Delacroix, A Young Tiger Playing with Its Mother, 1830, . File:LandseerMonarch1851.jpg|'s Monarch of the Glen (1851); National Museum of Scotland. File:Common foxes in the snow.jpg| Common foxes in the snow (1893) by . File:Two thoroughbreds in a landscape by Charles Hancock, 1828.tif| Two thoroughbreds in a wide landscape (1828) by Charles Hancock.

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