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Snaffles : ウィキペディア英語版
Snaffles

Charles "Snaffles" Johnson Payne (1884–1967) was an English painter best known for his humorous work.
== Style and subject matter ==
Snaffle A =TO KISS
Snaffles specialised in water colours and drawings sold as prints which, at least initially, were hand coloured by the artist and his sisters. His subject matter was invariably military, racing or hunting / equestrian scenes (polo, pig sticking), or some combination of these. Many of his most famous pictures contrast or combine military life with the peacetime pursuits of racing and hunting. These include:
*"Pass friend" showing a fox sneaking past a Home Guard sentry;
*"The Season 1939–1940" showing a mounted hunt making its way past an armoured unit on exercise on a narrow road, somewhere in England;
*"Blighty – 'and only five and twenty percent of the danger'" showing a soldier jumping a hazardous fence and ditch out hunting;
*"Once upon a time" showing a couple of soldiers, presumably in the cavalry (there is a light tank behind them), reminiscing about pre-war polo, racing and hunting.
The Grand National features in a number of his pictures, including "The Grand National – the Canal Turn", "A National candidate" and arguably his most famous work: a pair of pictures showing "The finest view in Europe" (picture painted from the perspective of a hunt follower, looking over the ears of his mount, with hounds running and a number of hedges to jump) and "The worst view in Europe" (race horse and jockey are shown approaching a formidable fence in sheeting rain, with a loose horse to the subject's right possibly about to cut him up, and the back end of a further horse which has come to grief over the fence immediately in front of the subject. One assumes that the 'view' in question is that of the jockey – see below. It could conceivably be that of a racegoer / punter who has backed the inept and drunken jockey shown – the perspective shown in the picture is in fact that of the spectator, albeit observing the jockey looking at the fence ahead of him.)
The vast majority of his racing pictures in fact show point-to-pointing (i.e. amateur racing organised by the hunt to raise funds) rather than racing under rules. For example:
*"Oh! To be in England now that April's here!"
*"A bona fide fox hunter"
*"A sight to take home and dream about"
*"Prepare to receive cavalry"
In each of these and many others there is one or more mounted person in hunt dress. The general background (pitched tents, running stream rather than artificial ditches) is indicative of a point-to-point course rather than a permanent racecourse. The title "Oh to be in England now that April's here!" specifically refers to the point-to-point season which in those days would have been at the end of the hunting season, i.e. spring.
His most famous military scenes include a number of studies of different types of soldier fighting in the Great War, e.g. "Anzac" (Australian / NZ soldier), "Jock", "The Gunner", "The Canadian", "The DR" (dispatch rider) etc.
Snaffles had a distinctive drawing style, often showing just one person in detail. In addition his pictures are often recognisable from the use of (1) the incorporation of one or a number of sketches (often uncoloured) around the principal image (what is sometimes referred to as a remarque), and (2) some additional caption, often amusing, to supplement the picture's title and further explain the scene.
The additional caption beneath the title of "The worse view in Europe" is "Oh Murther! The dhrink died out of me and the wrong side of Bechers." (In the UK, at the time, many jump jockeys were Irish which Snaffles was presumably trying to reference in his spelling of "mother" and "drink". Becher's Brook is a famous fence at Aintree.) There is then a small sketch to the side, presumably depicting the sequel, showing a dismounted horse, its jockey unconscious on the floor. Two men stand by, one holding the horse and the other raising a flag to summon the doctor or warn the stewards that there has been a fall.
In contrast to many hunting artists (Lionel Edwards, Alfred Munnings etc.), a high proportion of Snaffles's work showed individual hunting characters, sometimes inactive, as opposed to a large field sweeping over vale country. Early Snaffles includes a set of four "hunting characters": "Hogany tops", "The gent with horses to sell", "Blood and quality" and "Old tawney". In each case the character depicted is shown more or less immobile with a minimum of scenery. Similarly a later work, "Ansome is wot ansome does" shows a bespectacled hunt follower sitting still on a physically unprepossessing horse ("Ansome is -"), whilst the small sketch in the corner of the print shows the same horse and rider bounding effortlessly across a huge stream ("- wot ansome does").

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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