Two Couples of Hounds in a Park Landscape with two Terriers
Francis Sartorius I (London 1734 - London 1804)
Category
Art / Oil paintings
Date
1785
Materials
Oil on canvas
Measurements
743 x 892 mm (29 1/4 x 35 1/8 in)
Place of origin
England
Order this imageCollection
Upton House, Warwickshire
NT 446703
Caption
The names and pedigrees of the four hounds have been inscribed in the black panel below the picture itself. The dogs are named: Belman, Mannerly, Belmaid and Guider. They all doubtless feature in Sartorius’s painting of the whole pack, which belonged to Peter Beckford, which is also at Upton House. Peter Beckford was a cousin of William Beckford, the famous collector (whose portrait by Romney is also at Upton House). He was the first English writer to describe the science of hunting, and he is perhaps best known for his ‘Thoughts on Hunting’, published in 1781. It is said that he “would bag a fox in Greek, find a hare in Latin, inspect his kennels in Italian, and direct the economy of his stables in exquisite French.”
Summary
Oil painting on canvas, Two Couples of Hounds in a Park Landscape, by Francis Sartorius (London 1734 - London 1804), 1785. Inscribed with names and pedigrees of the four hounds in panel below; Belman, Mannerly, Belmaid, Guider.
Provenance
Given with Upton House to the National Trust by Walter Samuel, 2nd Viscount Bearsted (1882 – 1948) shortly before his death in 1948
Credit line
Upton House, The Bearsted Collection (National Trust)
Marks and inscriptions
Belman, Mannerly, Belmaid, Guider
Makers and roles
Francis Sartorius I (London 1734 - London 1804), artist