250 ANIMAL PAINTERS 



in intimate sympathy, and animals whose character 

 he knew as well as their forms. His works possess 

 a simplicity and truth which arrest attention and 

 afford pleasure. The portrait which faces this page 

 was taken from a rough sketch made by Dean 

 Wolstenholme, Junior, when a young man and 

 afterwards finished. 



WORKS OF DEAN WOLSTENHOLME, Sen. 



EXHIBITED AT THE ROYAL ACADEMY (28 in number). 



VEAR 



1S03— corn s/xG. 



lioi—FOX-HUNTING. 



lio-,— THE EPPING FOREST HUNT. 



zitii—(^y HOUNDS RUNNING GALLANTLY INTO A FOX IN VIEIF— POR- 

 TRAIT OF MR. J. COLDHAM fXTforming the Austrian Broadsword Exercise 

 with two swords, at speed— HOUNDS DRAIFING COVER AND JUST 

 FINDING— VIEW OF THE INTERIOR OF MR. HARRISON'S 

 VETERINAR Y SHOP. Horses Shoeing, &c. 



iZoj—VIEIY OF THE GOLDEN LANE GENUINE BEER BREWERY. 



1808— (2) PORTRAIT OF PILOT, formerly the property of Mr. Lade— rV^^fF OF THE 

 INTERIOR OF THE SIX-STALL STABLE AT THE FINSBURV 

 REPOSITORY. 



1809— (4) THE CHASE— DIGGING THE FOX FROM EARTH— PORTRAIT OF 

 A CHARGER belonging to an Officer in the City of London Light Horse— THE 

 LEAP OF THE STAG. 



l8io-{4) RETURN FROM FOX-HUNTING BY MOONLIGHT— PORTRAITS OF 

 HORSES belonging to a Stage Coach changing horses on the Edmonton Road — 

 RETURN FROM HUNTING BY MOONLIGHT — PORTRAITS OF 

 TWO HORSES, a Dray Horse, the property of H. Meux, Esq., and Hunters and 

 Hounds stopping to refresh at a public-house returning from Hunting. 



1813— (5) PORTRAIT OF AN OLD HORSE, the property of the late C. S. Chauncey, 

 Esq., Cheshunt, Hertfordshire— /'CyeT'^.^/T' OF HORSE AND DOG, the 

 property of Mr. Fuller, Tooting, Surrey— PORTRAITS OF POINTERS, 

 belonging to C. Chauncey, Esq., Little Munden, Hertfordshire— j^O/eTi^.^/T' OF 

 MR. JOLLIFFE'S HOUNDS AND HORSES wailing an Appointment at 

 Merstham Church, now in possession of Lord Hylton ; also another of his pictures, 

 COL. JOLLIFFE AND HOUNDS. 



iZ-H-PORTRAIT OF A HERTFORDSHIRE SHEEP, the property- of Mr. 

 J. Clarke, of Littley Park, allowed by judges to be the largest ever seen. 



1819— (2) PORTRAIT OF BELFONT, a fast trotter, the property of a Gentleman— 

 PORTRAIT OF A GENTLEMAN AND HIS SON waiting in Cover, 

 Hounds finding. 



1S20-VIEWOF A GENTLE.VAN'S RESIDENCE IN SURREY, with Portraits 

 of favourite Cattle. 



1S24— VIEW OF THE INTERIOR OF THE RIDING SCHOOL belonging to the 

 Light Horse Volunteers, with portraits of horses, &c. 



