
Newmarket Heath, with the King's stables rubbing house at the finish of the Beacon Course
George Stubbs·1765
Historical Context
Stubbs's Newmarket Heath with the King's Stables from 1765 depicts the famous racecourse that was the center of English thoroughbred racing culture and the sporting venue most frequented by aristocratic patrons whose commissions sustained Stubbs's career. Newmarket had been the royal racing center since Charles II, and its stable blocks, training gallops, and viewing stands were as familiar to the aristocratic world Stubbs served as the London drawing rooms where his paintings hung. The combination of architectural documentation—the rubbing house where horses were cooled down after racing—with the open heathland setting gave Stubbs a subject that combined the equestrian precision of his animal painting with topographical accuracy and the social prestige of racing culture's most celebrated venue. His Newmarket paintings served as visual documentation of a world his aristocratic patrons inhabited and cherished.
Technical Analysis
The horses and riders are rendered with the anatomical precision that distinguished Stubbs from all other sporting painters. The broad, flat landscape of Newmarket Heath provides a stage that emphasizes the elegant proportions of the thoroughbreds.
Look Closer
- ◆The King's stables rubbing house is rendered with topographic accuracy—a specific building at.
- ◆The thoroughbreds' conformation, neck set, and proportions distinguish them from carriage or.
- ◆Stubbs places the horses against the vast, flat Newmarket sky in the classic horse portrait format.
- ◆Jockeys and stable hands wear the specific racing silks and stable clothing of the 1760s.



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