EditorialOne of Four Portraits of Horses - a Chestnut Racehorse with Jockey Up: walking to the left; jockey in buff-yellow jacket. Date/Period: Ca. 1730. Painting. Oil on canvas. Height: 305 mm (12 in); Width: 356 mm (14.01 in).
EditorialOne of Four Portraits of Horses - a Chestnut Racehorse with Jockey Up: walking to the left; jockey in buff-yellow jacket. Date/Period: Ca. 1730. Painting. Oil on canvas. Height: 305 mm (12 in); Width: 356 mm (14.01 in).
Editorialborders, Block-printed paper, varnish, Shaded buff and yellow strips carry rosette enclosed in a square. Square has bell-flower shaped ornament on each side. Strips separated by a deep maroon band. Printed in buff, yellow, maroon, France, ca. 1870, Wal...
EditorialTextile, Medium: wool Technique: slit tapestry, Long panel in bright clear colors: many shades of yellow and buff, with pink, cherry and dark red, eggplant, and some white, and a little black for outlining. Horizontal pattern of white central row of sm...
EditorialOne of Four Portraits of Horses - a Chestnut Racehorse with Jockey Up: walking to the left; jockey in buff-yellow jacket. Date/Period: Ca. 1730. Painting. Oil on canvas. Height: 305 mm (12 in); Width: 356 mm (14.01 in).
EditorialOne of Four Portraits of Horses - a Chestnut Racehorse with Jockey Up: walking to the left; jockey in buff-yellow jacket. Date/Period: Ca. 1730. Painting. Oil on canvas. Height: 305 mm (12 in); Width: 356 mm (14.01 in).
EditorialSula serrator, Print, The Australasian gannet (Morus serrator), also known as Australian gannet and takapu, is a large seabird of the booby and gannet family, Sulidae. Adults are mostly white, with black flight feathers at the wingtips and lining the t...
EditorialOne of Four Portraits of Horses - a Chestnut Racehorse with Jockey Up: walking to the left; jockey in buff-yellow jacket. Date/Period: Ca. 1730. Painting. Oil on canvas. Height: 305 mm (12 in); Width: 356 mm (14.01 in).
EditorialOne of Four Portraits of Horses - a Chestnut Racehorse with Jockey Up: walking to the left; jockey in buff-yellow jacket, Attributed to James Seymour, 1702-1752, British.