Fort Worth

Kimbell Art Museum shows off its newest acquisition

The Fort Worth museum acquired the George Stubbs masterpiece in memory of Ben J. Fortson

Kimbell Art Museum

Mares and Foals Belonging to the Second Viscount Bolingbroke, is the newest addition to Kimbell Art Museum’s collection.

A British masterpiece has found a new home in Texas. The Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth recently acquired George Stubbs’s Mares and Foals Belonging to the 2nd Viscount Bolingbroke, painted between about 1761 and 1762. The painting is now on view in the Kimbell’s Louis I. Kahn Building.

The painting’s focus is Stubb’s best-known subject: a horse. Born in Liverpool in 1724, Stubbs is regarded as the finest painter of animals in the history of European art. His paintings of horses transcend historical genres to achieve rare pictorial refinement and emotional resonance. His drawings of horses attracted the patronage from horse-loving aristocrats, allowing him to explore a variety of animal subjects including portraits of individual racehorses, as well as paintings of domestic dogs, both those bred for sport and as pets; depictions of wild, exotic animals, sometimes in combat; and most notably, his series of mares and foals. Mares and Foals Belonging to the 2nd Viscount Bolingbroke is one of the principal, and likely earliest, in a series that has been called the artist’s crowning achievement.

The acquisition, along with that of Thomas Gainsborough’s painting Going to Market, Early Morning (c. 1773), purchased by the Kimbell in 2023, significantly elevates the Kimbell’s holdings of eighteenth-century British paintings, a genre Velma and Kay Kimbell favored when initially building their collection.

“With a mandate to collect only works of major historical and aesthetic importance, the Kimbell is the natural home for this masterpiece,” said Eric Lee, director of the Kimbell Art Museum. “I am sure that it will become an audience favorite. Visitors to the museum will relish the multidimensional depiction of mares and foals—alive with subtle drama, imbued with tenderness, and fascinating in its expression of the individual personalities of each horse.”

The painting is slightly more than six feet long by three feet tall and features a mature bay mare at the center of a group of two other mares and three foals, who nuzzle close to their mothers. The composition is set within a springtime landscape at what is probably the viscount’s family estate of Lydiard Tregoze, Wiltshire, now Borough of Swindon, with verdant green parkland, cloudy sky, and a broad, dark gray stretch of water providing spatial interest beyond the long, slender legs of the horses.

Highly naturalistic, the horses are lifelike in their anatomical forms and poses. While the overall mood is tranquil and domestic as the horses gently commune with each other, the cloudy sky and the wide, sparkling eyes of the mares add an element of drama and nobility to the composition.

The painting is now on view in the Kimbell’s Louis I. Kahn Building.

The title references 2nd Viscount Bolingbroke, Frederick St. John (1732–1787), one of Stubbs's most important early patrons. As one of the earliest commissions of this equestrian subject, the Kimbell painting became a trendsetter for the British upper classes. It is probably the work that Stubbs exhibited at the Society of Artists in 1762. Soon, other members of Bolingbroke’s circle of aristocratic horse enthusiasts and fellow statesmen of the Whig political party commissioned similar compositions of broodmares and their offspring, many doubtless depicting the patrons’ own horses. Stubbs’s equestrian paintings as well as his portrayals of rural life and of other animals were an especially delightful and sophisticated expression of the pastimes of the British nobility and landed gentry. Patrons could hang such works alongside fashionable portraits and Old Master paintings in their town or country houses, where vast fields, parklands, stables, and studs reflected their love of hunting and sporting life.

Stubbs’ talent extended beyond his understanding of and ability to depict equine anatomy and appearance. His works captured the individual animal’s temperament. His genius in understanding the horse derived from anatomical study, from his apparent empathy for the character of each horse and his ability to express its exquisite beauty. He set these creatures in landscapes that enhanced the mood, composition, and legibility of the animal subjects.

Mares and Foals Belonging to the 2nd Viscount Bolingbroke remained in the family collection at Lydiard Tregoze until it was sold at auction in 1943. The painting became part of the collection of Mrs. John Arthur Dewar, a member of the whisky distillery family, who also owned Henry Raeburn’s Allen Brothers (Portrait of James and John Lee Allen), which entered the Kimbell collection in 2002.

The Kimbell acquired Mares and Foals Belonging to the 2nd Viscount Bolingbroke from a private collection through London-based art dealers Simon C. Dickinson Ltd. The painting joins Stubbs’s Lord Grosvenor's Arabian Stallion with a Groom, a work acquired by the Kimbell in 1981. Mares and Foals Belonging to the 2nd Viscount Bolingbroke was previously on view at the Kimbell in 2004–2005, when it was on loan to the exhibition Stubbs and the Horse.

The Kimbell Art Foundation acquired Mares and Foals Belonging to the 2nd Viscount Bolingbroke in memory of Ben J. Fortson (1932–2024), who passed away in May and whose leadership was instrumental in the Kimbell’s growth. Mr. Fortson served on the Board of Directors of the Kimbell Art Foundation from 1964 until his death and was the Foundation’s longtime Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. He acted as a steward for the Kimbell’s investments and finances. He was also the driving force behind the building of the museum’s Renzo Piano Pavilion, which opened in 2013 and houses the museum’s temporary exhibitions and permanent collections of Asian, African, and ancient American art.

Learn more: Kimbell Art Museum

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