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Monday, September 22, 2025 |
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Delacroix and the Horse Opens at the Clark Art Institute |
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Two Horses Fighting in a Stormy Landscape, c. 1828, by Eugène Delacroix. Oil on canvas, 13 7/8 by 17 1/2 in. Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA.
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WILLIAMSTOWN, MA.- The special installation Delacroix and the Horse will feature a new acquisition, Two Horses Fighting in a Stormy Landscape by the great French Romantic painter Eugène Delacroix. The installation, which includes a selection of drawings and prints of horses by Delacroix, Degas, and other 19th-century French artists, is on view through September 17.
In addition to showcasing Two Horses Fighting, the installation will include prints, drawings, and sculptures of horses by 19th century French artists from the Clarks collection and one work from the collection of the Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA). Featuring Delacroix most prominently, the installation includes two of his works on paper selected from the Clarks collection of 22 prints and drawings by this artist. Delacroixs Studies of Horses and Lion Eating a Horse are joined by WCMAs Sheet of Studies.
A significant number of works by Edgar Degas include the pastels Jockey on a Rearing Horse, Racehorse, and Two Horses, One Nuzzling the Other, and the bronzes Rearing Horse and Horse Standing. Other works in the installation include two lithographs, A French Farrier and Mameluck Defending a Wounded Trumpeter by Theodore Géricault, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrecs color lithograph, The Jockey.
Equestrian subjects were of great interest to Sterling Clark, said Michael Conforti, director of the Clark. Two Horses Fighting complements the Clarks great horse scenes by Theodore Géricault, Edgar Degas, and others.
The Clark acquired Two Horses Fighting in a Stormy Landscape, an oil on canvas, in early 2006. It was offered by the direct descendents of the family who purchased the painting at auction in 1864. Two Horses Fighting, painted around 1828, was kept in Delacroixs personal collection until the time of his death. The auction sticker, with the number 81, is still affixed to the upper left of the canvas. The paintings scale and brushy execution underscore the distinct qualities of Delacroixs work and offer insight into his working process. Though intimate in scale, this visually powerful work adds a new dimension to the Clarks distinguished collection of 19th-century French art.
The painting was lightly cleaned recently at the Williamstown Art Conservation Center. Discolored varnish and decades of accumulated grime were removed, revealing once again the painting's original bold palette and rich brushwork.
An aficionado of racehorses, Sterling Clark established thoroughbred farms in Normandy and Virginia, where he bred Never Say Die, his champion three year old and winner of the 1954 Derby of Epsom Downs, Britains premier race. Works of art featuring horses by George Stubbs, John Ferneley, Alfred Munnings, and Ben Marshall, once owned by members of the Clark family, are on view during The Clark Brothers Collect: Impressionist and Early Modern Paintings, which explores the collecting of the great 20th-century art patrons Sterling Clark and Stephen Clark. The Clark Brothers Collect, on view through September 4, is the first to unite the masterpieces collected by Sterling - works by Renoir, Monet, Homer, Sargent, and more - with those collected by his brother Stephen, including paintings by Hopper, Van Gogh, Matisse, and Cézanne.
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