Henry Thomas Alken

The Belvoir Hunt: Jumping into and out of a Lane

c.1830–40

Not on display

Artist
Henry Thomas Alken 1785–1851
Medium
Oil paint on canvas
Dimensions
Support: 451 × 648 mm
Collection
Tate
Acquisition
Presented by Paul Mellon through the British Sporting Art Trust 1979
Reference
T02353

Display caption

This is the second of four scenes by Alken of the Belvoir [pronounced Beaver] hunt, one of the oldest and most celebrated of the great foxhound packs located in the flat, open countryside in and around Leicestershire. The Belvoir, like the Quorn, Pytchley or Cottesmore hunts, was open to members through subscription. To hunt with such a pack was an enormously popular activity with fashionable society during the first half of the nineteenth century.
Henry Alken is the best known of a large family of sporting artists. His lively and humorous hunting scenes were frequently reproduced as popular prints, published for some years under the pseudonym 'Ben Tally-Ho'.

Gallery label, August 2004

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Catalogue entry

[from] THE BELVOIR HUNT: a set of four c.1830–40 [T02352-T02355]

T02353 2. JUMPING INTO AND OUT OF A LANE

Inscribed ‘H Alken’: (1) and (4) lower left; (2) and (3) lower right
Oil on canvas, each 17 3/8 × 25 1/2 (44 × 64.5)
Presented by Mr Paul Mellon KBE through the British Sporting Art Trust 1979
Prov: ...; Arthur Ackermann & Son Ltd., from whom purchased by Paul Mellon 1964.
Exh: British Sporting Paintings, Fermoy Art Gallery, King's Lynn 1979 (24–27).
Lit: Egerton, 1978, p.253, no.275, 1–4.

The Belvoir is one of the oldest and most celebrated hunts; it dates from 1750 and became a foxhound pack in 1762. The kennels throughout the Hunt's history have been at Belvoir Castle. Its country lies in Leicestershire and Lincolnshire, adjoining that of the Quorn and the Cottesmore at Melton Mowbray. Alken's scenes catch something of the qualities, half-dandy, half-daredevil, deliberately cultivated by Meltonian sportsmen; in ‘The Meet’, one rider nonchalantly smokes a cheroot as he waits, and in ‘The Death’ one accepts a cigar from another's silver case, but (2) and (3) show most of the field taking fences and ditches with considerable verve and aplomb. The variety of landscape in the four scenes illustrates ‘Brooksby's’ comments on the Belvoir country (quoted in Baily's Hunting Directory, 1966–7, p.10): ‘You may ride over small grass meadow, broad grazing land, light heath and heavy plough. It is impossible to sum up its characteristics in a sentence or two’.

If the suggested dating of 1830–40 is correct, the huntsman in Alken's scenes is Thomas Goosey, who had been whipper-in to the Belvoir from 1794 to 1816, and was its huntsman from 1816 to 1842. ‘Nimrod’ described Goosey as ‘being just what a man should be to assist hounds in a flying country like his. He had an eye like a hawk - very quick to his points, and was a more than commonly sportsmanlike-looking person on his horse’ (C. J. Apperley, Nimrod's Hunting Reminiscences, 1843, ed. 1926, p.129). The Mastership of the Belvoir was held by the Dukes of Rutland until 1896, except between 1830 and 1859; during that period (which almost certainly includes the period of Alken's scenes) the then Duke of Rutland, having retired from the hunting field, gave the Mastership to his nephew, Lord Forester.

Published in:
The Tate Gallery 1978-80: Illustrated Catalogue of Acquisitions, London 1981

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