Skip navigation links

Art Funded



The Canterbury Races

The Canterbury Races (© Beaney Museum and Art Gallery)

Send as an E-Card Enlarge

Thomas Rowlandson (1756 - 1827)

Beaney Museum and Art Gallery

1804

Canterbury's racecourse was on Barham Downs, a few miles outside the city, by the road to Dover. During its heyday - approximately 1760 to 1820 - the races were a popular fixture in the area's social calendar. The course has now vanished, as has general awareness of its existence. Similarly, there were no views of it known to survive, apart from an engraving of the New Stand on a pair of silver pass tokens, and Rowlandson's picture is clearly a significant work in this context. It has value as a topographical record, confirming and drawing together the various strands of evidence - maps, texts, and the engraved pass tokens. Beyond this it captures a dynamic sense of period and occasion, with an immediacy of appeal.

  • Medium: watercolour, pen, ink and pencil
  • Dimensions: 32 x 54 cm
  • Art Fund Grant: £4000 ( Total: £25,000)
  • ArtFunded in: 1995
  • Vendor: Richard Green

Add your comments about this artwork Hide this form

Have your say

Sorry, you must be logged in to post a comment.
Click here to login or click here to register

Share this page


 

Other Works by Thomas Rowlandson


Other Works at Beaney Museum and Art...


Museums in the area