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Dog paintings versus the real canines

By: Martyd Hickmag

For so many generations, the most loved dogs stood at a special part of many an English drawing room. These days, it seems like paintings of such esteemed pets are found almost as frequently on the sturdy walls of New York living rooms or dens while the real ones walk happily through parks such as the Central Park. Portraits of pet dogs be they beribboned or with leather collars, at a playful stance or at a restful mode, there is no erasing the fact that these canvases have become so in demand thanks to the popularity of English style interior along with the longstanding devotion of people to the animals known as man's best friend.

You will find that dogs are loved so much by Englishmen, who even offer them a place in their family portraits, proving that these pooches will always be close to their hearts. Ones described as hunting, racing, shooting and doggy portraits have sold immensely ever since 1961, when the auction house began to put these up for auction. A Newfoundland which was a white and black dog in a portrait was loved by this prolific painter and the price it was sold for, to a sporting artists was a record price.

Immersing oneself in 18th and mostly 19th century paintings enables one to move back and forth in time, through eras. Not many are aware that those who aspire for activities well beyond their social range like hunting, or perhaps shooting with jackets, hounds and horses that are the ones who are fond of these art pieces. In fact, a certain interior designer and antiques dealer believes that there are so many lovers of dog paintings around that she has opened a tiny shop in the Manhattan. In the shop, dog paintings, with a smattering of cow and horse pictures hang neatly on the blue and white covered walls.

There are two types of collectors. One are the people who happens to have the same dog as a certain subject in a portrait. And the second are the people who want to see if the painting is anatomically correct as they know the breed in and out. There are those who sometimes prefer having these dogs instead of their real counterparts. Feeding or walking them is not a necessity. An interior designer recalls how he thought that he was being nonsensical when he purchased in London his first two dog portraits and now he has seen this trend becoming an extremely expensive and in demand thing.

The decorator possesses around 75 dog paintings today and he proudly hangs some of them in his apartment in Manhattan from taffeta ribbons. Even in the midst of many dealers and art specialists emphasizing that it is the quality of the painting along with the artist behind it setting the price standard, people would still insist that like the changes in fashions of real life dogs, some dog painting are just more sough after than other kinds of dogs in a portrait. If Cavalier King Charles Spaniel paintings used to be the only in demand dog paintings, we can now see a growth of people asking for ones with West Highland Terriers, Scotties and Cairn dogs as subjects. By having a portrait of your German shepherd, you can sit with him forever.

The heyday of dog painting was from 1850 to 1920, said a dealer who sells dog paintings from his small one bedroom apartment in Manhattan. He recounts that there was an influx of people looking for King Charles spaniels, Chinese shar peis as well as portraits of terriers. He saw 10 demands for paintings of doberman pinscher dogs in the year that had passed. When asked if he has ever held a Doberman painting, he answers that this breed got developed only during the late 1880s and are such a recent breed so this is why there are practically no good paintings of them.

The artist periodically holds special auctions of sporting paintings. Some of the people that participate in such auctions are those who reside in country homes, into hunting and racing and then there are the ones that pull of a look inspired by a famous designer of fashion labels and materials. A woman who gazed through a black and white dog photo decided to buy a Spaniel painting and she works as an advertising executive for a huge TV firm. A ruby red spaniel came into her home first as she waited for the portrait that will match her pet, due to arrive from England. The painting, after just 3 months, came to her and it was a dog that had coat colors of black and tan, a King Charles indeed but even if it was unmatched she kept both.

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