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He painted paddock scenes before the races and winner's circle scenes after, but in only a few instances did he portray the race itself. He loved horse racing—but lamented any exploitation of the animals. He went on shooting parties—but never carried a gun. His war paintings omitted any carnage.
From the 1920s until his death in 1959, Munnings could count upon a steady stream of rich commissions. From time to time, though, he threatened to quit work-for-hire and concentrate upon subjects of his own choosing, especially country life and landscapes. But his wife kept his hand to the easel, reminding him of their overhead which, at one point, included taking care of more than 30 horses, a country hunting cottage, their London properties, his London clubs and other manifestations of the good life.
Munnings was sometimes gone for months at a time living among the wealthiest people in the world. That life had its benefits. Munnings writes of sketching a mare and foal in an elm-shaded paddock at Anthony de Rothschild's Southcourt Stud near Leighton Buzzard in the early 1920s. In those days a groom appeared daily at teatime with a silver service, placing it on the grass beside the artist with a word of encouragement. "There, sir, that should help you to keep going."
But Munnings also found that life in the rarefied air among patrons could be lonely. "You are a guest but you are really not their friend," observes Peralta-Ramos. "You are a servant but you are not a servant. It's a very awkward situation." To his credit, Munnings did not try to soften his Suffolk accent or change his salty language or his raffish style of dress. He was who he was. But he became more opinionated as the years rolled by, which also aggravated his obsessions about Picasso and what one critic called the Spaniard's "queer distortions."
"If he didn't agree with you, he'd let you know it and was not going to smile politely and let you get away with a silly comment," says Peralta-Ramos. He attracted fierce supporters and equally avid detractors.
"As those artists whom he criticized became more popular, it was the critic, not the artists, who suffered," says Duncan Robinson of the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge. "He lost some battles. But he was a fighter, old Munnings."
In 1932, philanthropist Paul Mellon asked Munnings to paint him astride his favorite hunter, Dublin, in Gloucestershire. In his Reflections in a Silver Spoon, Mellon recalls getting a photograph of the painting before the real thing arrived. "I thought the bushy willow tree to the left was a little disturbing and wrote to Munnings, asking whether he could do something to make it slightly less prominent," Mellon recalled. "Sometime later, I got a blast back saying in the first place, the tree wasn't a willow, it was a pollarded oak, and second, he had no intention of changing anything whatsoever. So that was that."
Neither man could have imagined that Mellon, then 25, would one day become one of the greatest supporters of sporting art and the biggest collector of Munnings' work.


Comments
very informative - much more so than most British web sites. Thanks C Haddon
Posted by chantal haddon on July 14,2008 | 04:57AM
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 | 12:41PM
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 | 02:46PM
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 | 04:20AM