Tag Archives: jockey

Horse Racing Art - Whoa!

Whoa!
18×24
Oil on Stretched Canvas

Today is it! The first day of two days now known as the Breeder’s Cup. This year’s Cup is being held at historic and beautiful Santa Anita Race Track in Arcadia, California.

Today is Ladies’ Day. Races today are the Filly & Mare Sprint, Juvenile Filly Turf, Juvenile Filly, Filly & Mare Turf and the Ladies Classic.

The rest of the Breeder’s Cup schedule follows on Saturday.

I haven’t seen a Breeder’s Cup Race live in several years due first to a Saturday working schedule and, more recently, to the fact that coverage has moved off network TV and onto cable and we have never had cable. (Before you start feeling too badly for me, I’ll tell you that’s by choice. We already have so much going on that there is no time for TV of any kind. Our TV is pushed into a corner and has not been watched, turned on or even dusted in many, many weeks. No great loss, let me tell you!).

I will be monitoring the races online, however. My favorite site for doing so is The Blood-Horse.com, but there are also other places to read about the races and to watch them. The really neat thing is that I can watch the part I really want to see (the races) without wading through all the wagering information (about which I don’t care a fig) or the inane interviews (which quite frequently make me long for the Good Ol’ Days when indepth profiles of the people AND horses involved were among my favorite parts of racing coverage).

In honor of today’s events, I’m presenting Whoa! to you. It is the fourth of four oil paintings featuring horse racing that I currently have.

The theme of this painting is not the race itself, but the challenge of bringing hot-blooded race horses to a stop afterward. My subjects for this painting are Quarter Horses, but any race horse will do.

These horses have just run the fastest 350 yards of their lives. Adrenaline is pumping, they are not ready to give up the race just yet. Especially not with competitors still eyeball to eyeball!

But the finish line has been reached and after that, well, the horses have to stop. Whether they want to or not.

During my years in Michigan, I tried to visit Mt. Pleasant Meadows. I liked to photograph racing action near the wire. At the small track in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan where I took most of my hundreds of racing reference photos, positioning myself near the wire also allowed me to photograph stretch runs, the run around the first turn, post parades and unsaddling without moving more than a few yards. If I walked a little further, I could also see the saddling paddock and the walk from the backstretch.

I always enjoy reviewing shots of the action at this track, but the photographs that led to this painting were a surprise. The tension between the horses’ forward momentum and the backward pull of the jockeys as they throw their weight against the reins and into the stirrups is part of the dynamics and drama that immediately attracted me. The dual between forward momentum and sudden, unyielding restraint was also too much to ignore. It is a part of the sport.

The fact that I also have shots of these three as they pounded toward the wire and almost from the start of the race only add dimension. For me, at least.

And I can look back at those photographs, taken in 1995, and know that the three horses were, foreground to background, Kentucky Boy Floyd, Pacific Teddy Bear and Easy Azer Repete. The six images I have show them battling tooth and nail for almost the entire stretch. There are, I think, some energetic paintings among those other shots, too.

Whoa! is available unframed for $1,050 or framed for $1,300 to the first buyer. Custom framing is also available upon request.

All of my horse racing art can be seen on my web site by clicking on the links to Horse Racing Art or Michigan Harness Horse Art.

©Copyright 2008 by Carrie Lewis. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Carrie Lewis’s website.

Horse Racing Art - Morning Dreams

Morning Dreams
16×20
Oil on Stretched Canvas

When most people think of horse racing, they think of those seconds on the track. The color and ceremony of the post parade. The clang of the starting gates being closed behind the horses and the shouts of jockeys, assistants and the starter in the seconds prior to the start. The sound and explosive energy of the start and then, of course, the race and the winner’s circle.

But that is only the final act. There is an entire ‘other’ world to horse racing that is as appealing to me as the racing itself. The barns where horses in training spend their off-track time and all the sights, sounds and smells that go with that.

Mornings (sometimes pre-dawn mornings) on the track in morning workouts, building strength, stamina, speed and discipline.

Hope is the Fountain of Youth in the Sport of Kings. The hopes of owners rest on the new foals every spring. The hopes of horsemen rest on the energy and speed of those youngsters during training. Stamina and speed in the morning inspire “morning dreams” of afternoon successes.

Morning Dreams is my most recent attempt to capture in oils the determination and focus of those early morning hours. It is set at Keeneland Racecourse in Lexington, Kentucky; my absolute favorite racing facility in the world (at least of those I’ve visited).

The morning I took the photograph that is the starting point for this painting, I spent the better part of an hour sitting in the stands watching countless horses and riders circling the track. I could have sat there all day but my sister and most frequent traveling companion was with me and wasn’t quite as enamored with the setting as I was!

I have been to Keeneland twice to watch and photograph morning work outs and each time, a painting has resulted. The quiet time between horse and rider is what captures my imagination each time. It doesn’t seem to matter whether or not there are other horses and riders on the track. There is a certain solitude that seems to envelope a pair when they are in the middle of a workout.

I still have pages of photographs from both visits, however, and expect more paintings in the future. There is just something about that place that draws my attention…

Morning Dreams is available unframed for $900 or framed for $1,100 to the first buyer. Custom framing is also available upon request.

All of my horse racing art can be seen on my web site by clicking on the links to Horse Racing Art or Michigan Harness Horse Art.

©Copyright 2008 by Carrie Lewis. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Carrie Lewis’s website.

Royal Ascot-the one racing date I won’t forget.

Graphite drawing of a jockey by Sheona Hamitlon Grant

I cannot and will not let another year pass without mentioning a great British tradition: Royal Ascot.
I missed Ladies’ Day yesterday and do not plan on missing the big day tomorrow.
Founded by Queen Anne in 1711, Royal Ascot is 5 days of great horse racing.
Dreams of going to Ascot have been in my mind since I can remember. Even as a wee girl the smell of the scones and the frivolity of wearing extra nice dresses as of course the sight and sound stunning thoroughbreds zoom past totaly mesmerized me…

The closest I got to this dream was to have seen youngsters training for the event very early one morning in Newmarket…an unforgetable visit I must add.
Well, I watched two races today - the Albany Stakes (six furlong race won by a 2 year old Irish filly Cuis Ghaire) and the King Edward VII - 1&1/2 mile  race won by Franke Detori (his 40th Ascot win) on the stunning Campanologist.
They are sooooo beautifullllllllll (I’m referring to the horses of course … the hats and the chaps are not bad but the equines are way superior.)
Why is it that of the 60 established racecourses in Great Britain and the 2 in Northern Ireland Royal Ascot is the most viewed and visited?
Fashion and style, glamour and tradition can only be a part of it .
The horses, the quality of the horses has to be and remain the main reason.
306.00 visitors agree with me and go to Royal Ascot to have a flutter on the horses ( a milestone was reached in 2006 with 1/2 million visitors).
Maybe the 3.5 million Pounds Sterling in  prize money (making it the most valuable race meeting in Europe) also has a role to play.

These impressive figures also mean that once a year, the hat manufacturers become the happiest hatters and milliners, selling there wildest creations at the wildest prices.
Champagne is happily sipped (185.000 bottles consumed in 5 days) with a nibble on a strawberry (5 tones consumed) wine is more or less just looked at with only 15.000 bottles consumed.
11.000 lobsters and 100.00 scones are savoured.
Over the years, it has not only grown in tradition and excellence but has also moved into the 21 century with style, aplomb and as fast as the horses race.  There is a Royal Ascot website with a great deal more than racing info and results, there is a blog, a magazine, a fashion show and next year there will the “Face of Ascot 2009″…  All these elements allow everyone to witness and understand just how spectacular Royal Ascot is and will remain for quite a while.
SO where does this fantastic race meeting fit into my art world?
How does Royal Ascot affect my art?
Quite simply, when watching the races, I am reliving my childhood dream. I remember senses and emotions that help keep my thoughts young.
A child can pin point the simplicity of beauty so well and this clarity of vision is crucial in keeping ones work honest and true…

Who knows how my next action equine drawing will end up, especially  if I back a winner tomorrow!

©Copyright 2008 by Sheona Hamilton Grant. See original post here.
To learn more about this artist, visit Sheona Hamilton Grant’s website.

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