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Lucy Elizabeth Kemp-Welch (20 June 1869 – 27 November 1958) was a British painter and teacher who specialized in painting working horses. She is best known for her illustrations to the 1915 edition of Anna Sewell's ''Black Beauty''. Her younger sister Edith was also an artist. The Lucy Kemp-Welch estate has been represented by Messum's Fine Art since 1975. ==Biography== Lucy Kemp-Welch was born in Bournemouth, showing an early excellence in art, exhibiting for the first time when she was 14 years old, and moving to Bushey to study at Hubert von Herkomer’s art school at the age of 19. Kemp-Welch believed in painting out of doors, and made numerous quick oil sketches. As one of Herkomer's best and most favoured students, she was able to set up her own studio, in an old former inn known as 'Kingsley'. She took over the direction of the School after Herkomer in 1905 and ran it until 1926, when she spent several summers following Sanger's Circus, recording the horses. She resided in Bushey, Hertfordshire for most of her life and a major collection of her works is in Bushey Museum. They include very large paintings of wild ponies on Exmoor, galloping polo ponies, the last horse-launched lifeboat being pulled into a boiling sea, heavy working horses pulling felled timber and hard-working farm horses trudging home at the end of the day. Her interest in equine subjects extended to the use of horses in war, and she painted two Boer War scenes, In Sight': Lord Dundonald's dash on Ladysmith'' (Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter), and ''Sons of the City'' (private collection). During World War I, she exhibited ''Big Guns to the Front'' (National Museum of Wales, Cardiff), and ''The Leaders of a Heavy Gun Team'' (Royal Artillery Institution). The former was painted on Salisbury Plain while eight batteries of horse artillery were continually rode towards her. During World War One women were employed at Army Remount Depots in training and preparing horses for military service. Kemp-Welch painted two scenes at the largest such depot, staffed entirely by women, at Russley Park in Wiltshire. In December 1914, Kemp-Welch was engaged by the British Parliamentary Recruiting Committee to paint the artwork for the famous army recruitment poster, which she signed, 'E. Kemp-Welch 1914.' As well as pictures of horses, Kemp-Welch painted other animals, flowers, and landscapes. ''Colt-Hunting in the New Forest'' (1897) became her best-known picture after being purchased for the Chantrey Collection for 500 guineas, and is now in the national collection at Tate. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Lucy Kemp-Welch」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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