Sir Edwin Landseer RA, A long-haired dog lying down

A long-haired dog lying down, ca.1810

Sir Edwin Landseer RA (1802 - 1873)

RA Collection: Art

When Edwin Landseer joined the Royal Academy schools in 1816 he was nicknamed the ‘little dog boy’ by the painter Henry Fuseli. Almost all of Landseer’s early drawings depict animals, with dogs and horses being his favourite subjects at that time. As domestic pets as well as farm animals, dogs were an obvious subject for the young artist but this early interest proved to be especially profound and enduring.

In his later career Landseer became the pre-eminent animal painter of the Victorian era and was particularly celebrated for his depictions of dogs. After he visited Sir Walter Scott in 1824, the novelist wrote to a friend that Landseer had 'drawn every dog in the House'. He not only painted dog portraits like ‘Bashaw’ (1827; Private collection) but also subject pictures, like ‘The Old Shepherd’s Chief Mourner’(1837; V&A). Landseer imbued the animals with human emotions and characteristics in order to illustrate moral or narrative themes. Some of his early drawings such as ‘Dustman’s Dog’ already demonstrate this urge to humanise and classify.

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Object details

Title
A long-haired dog lying down
Artist/designer
Sir Edwin Landseer RA (1802 - 1873)
Date
ca.1810
Object type
Drawing
Place of Publication
United Kingdom
Medium
Pencil on off-white laid paper
Dimensions

9 cm x 14 cm

Collection
Royal Academy of Arts
Object number
02/91
Acquisition
Given by Sir John Aird 1883
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