The Painter Who Hated Picasso
Sporting artist Alfred Munnings loved horses, the English countryside and a good stiff drink. What he didn't like was modern art.
- By Peter Chew
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2006, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
The years from about 1900 to 1914, encompassing the Edwardian era, were among the artist's most creative. He produced wonderfully atmospheric pictures of farmers and villagers gossiping and otherwise enjoying themselves at horse fairs and country race meetings. These were his people; the Munnings clan had been living in these parts, close to the soil, since the Battle of Agincourt in 1415.
In the summer of 1910, Munnings fell in love with Cornwall, in southwest England, with its stone-walled dairy farms, spectacular cliffs, pounding surf and cry of sea gulls. Late one December afternoon at a spot along the coast, the artist was out with the hunt when a fox eluded the hounds and bounded down a cliff. When the riders dismounted and peered below, they saw the fox crouching on a boulder at the edge of the booming surf. Munnings and the whipper-in (identified only as "Jack") made their way down the cliff. Jack cracked his whip at the fox, which plunged into the water with a terrified yelp and was immediately fighting for its life.
In his memoirs, Munnings recalls that the current repeatedly carried the rapidly tiring fox just short of the rocks, only to drag him back to sea. At what must have been the fox's last chance, a huge wave lifted him ashore. He shook himself, scrambled up the cliff and disappeared into a crevice. Jack started after him, but Munnings stopped him. The professional hunt staff was furious, but members of the hunt field cheered. Munnings' rendering of the episode, Gone to Cliff, fetched $2,426,000 at auction in June 2001.
Sir Alfred's last days in Cornwall were spent in the looming shadow of World War I. Munnings found some of the young artists there less interested in painting than partying, which they did Roman-style, sipping wine and nibbling grapes on floor cushions. The army turned Munnings down because of his blind eye, but he was able to wangle a civilian job outside of Reading in 1917, processing tens of thousands of Canadian horses en route to France—and often death. Nearly 500,000 British horses alone perished in World War I. After about a year, Munnings became an official war artist attached to the Canadian Cavalry Brigade under the command of British general J.E.B. "Jack" Seely.
On a bitter cold January morning in 1918, in a shell-blasted landscape on the Western Front, a few thousand yards from the German lines, Munnings painted a portrait of General Seely and Warrior, his charger. Later, when General Seely's unit was forced into a galloping retreat, the artist discovered what it was like to come under shellfire.
When he returned to his old life in London in the summer of 1918, it was like Murphy's Law turned on its head: everything that could go right professionally for the 40-year-old artist did go right. A pair of canny Scottish art dealers bought up most of his prewar paintings, helping to make him financially secure. He leased his first apartment and studio in London and in 1919, bought Castle House in Dedham, Suffolk, in the "Constable country" along the Suffolk-Essex border, famed for its big sky and gnarled oaks and so-called in tribute to the great landscape artist John Constable (1776-1837), whom Munnings hugely admired. His 1919 London exhibition of 45 paintings of the Canadians in France was a smashing success, and he was in even greater demand after Princess Alice commissioned him to paint her husband, the Earl of Athlone. Munnings posed him in uniform, aboard his horse against a faux battlefield on the grounds of Windsor Castle.
In 1920, Munnings married Violet McBride, a young widow and a top show ring rider, the daughter of a society riding instructor. Her social connections were doubtless helpful. She had a shrewd head for business and handled their finances skillfully. The Munnings were often apart for long stretches while he traveled and she hunted foxes.
At Munnings' favorite racetrack, historic Newmarket, he produced a series of paintings showing horses plunging, rearing and milling about at the start in what Edgar Degas reportedly once called a state of "naked tension."
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Comments (7)
Thank you for a full commentary on Alfred Munnings. I believe there was a first wife, also an artist who he met in Cornwall.
Posted by Bridget Wright on October 17,2012 | 04:56 PM
where can i obtain a copy of munnings gone to cliff thanks kt
Posted by sue hawes on January 27,2012 | 12:59 PM
very good site, liked it immensley, and wasnt looking for it. ch
Posted by chantal haddon on January 21,2011 | 02:37 PM
I'm a descendent/relative of Munnings. Alfred's daughter Edie Munnings (later Edie Stratton) was my grandmother's cousin and I have a watercolour painting which Edie gave my Grandma. It appears to be of Krishnamurti giving an address to a group of followers. Is there any information anywhere about Edie Stratton and her work?
Posted by Jane Buxton on May 23,2009 | 07:20 AM
The Arts Club, 40 Dover Street, Mayfair, London W1 Is a London Gentleman's Club of which Munnings was a member and has the most marvellous, and rather too long live recording of Munnings speaking at a Club event, during which he trashes Picasso! It goes on and on and shows how well he thought of himself. He was of course right, however, Picasso has gets a look in too now. You would enjoy listening to this unique recording and I suggest that you contact Brian Clivaz, Secretary and General Manager, in order to secure a copy of this valuable archive. I am a former Director of the Arts Club, and it was essential in Munnings's day to be a member of this Club in order to become an RA. Wendy Harman
Posted by Wendy Harman on May 2,2009 | 05:46 PM
i am looking for a Munnings quote where he speaks of loosing sleep because of the horse...any help would be so much apprecited
Posted by karen vanderlaan on September 2,2008 | 03:41 PM
very informative - much more so than most British web sites. Thanks C Haddon
Posted by chantal haddon on July 14,2008 | 07:57 AM