A fine sporting painting by James Hardy Jnr depicting a boy with two gundogs. A gamekeeper’s assistant is shown pausing at the opening of a rustic fence with a gamebird tied to a pole and carried on his shoulder. As he walks through, a black spaniel can be seen at his side, while a red and white Irish setter runs ahead.
James Hardy Jnr was a genre and sporting painter born in Brighton, Sussex in 1832 into a family of artists. He was the son of the portrait and genre painter James Hardy (1801-1879) and his wife Elizabeth (née Vinson). His brothers David Hardy (1838-1870) and Heywood Hardy (1842-1933) and his sister Ada Hardy all became artists. His cousins Frederick Daniel Hardy (1827–1911) and George Hardy (1822-1909) were also painters. It is highly likely that Hardy and his siblings would have received tuition from their father as they share a similarity of style and subject matter.
When he was still young, the family moved to Chichester. By 1851, the family had left Sussex and moved to Bath, living at 30 Henrietta Street, where his father worked as a drawing master. Around this time, Hardy had also begun to establish himself as an artist and moved to Bristol where he lived at Bedford Villa. On 18 October, 1860 he married Laura Amelia May at Trinity Church, Cheltenham. The couple lived in Bristol where they started a family. In 1862, he made his debut at the Royal Academy and also at the British Institute. He also exhibited at the Royal Society of British Artists.
Perhaps to improve his prospects, Hardy moved to the St Pancras area of London sometime during the early 1870’s, residing at 61 Gloucester Crescent. He later moved to Thyra House in Finchley, before making his final move to 14 Church End Villas, Upper Station road in Finchley. Hardy died at Virginia Water on 24 July, 1889.
Examples of his work are held be a number of public institutions including Bury Art Museum, The Royal Hospitals, Stockport Museum, Touchstones Rochdale, Ulster Museum, West Park Museum and the Wisbech & Fenland Museum.
© Benton Fine Art
| Presentation | The painting is housed in a new, English made gilt frame which is in excellent condition. The reverse retains a label for Mitchell Galleries, an art dealership based at 2 & 3 Duke Street, London and run by George Mitchell from 1945 until 1951. The business was originally owned by George’s father Nathan Mitchell who ran it as N Mitchell from 1875 until his death in 1945. When George took over the dealership, he renamed it Mitchell Galleries. |
| Condition | As with all of our original antique oil paintings, this work is offered in ready to hang gallery condition, having been professionally cleaned, restored and revarnished. |
Dimensions
| Image Size | 19.5 inches x 15.5 inches (49.5cm x 39.5cm) |
| Framed Size | 24.5 inches x 20.5 inches (62.5cm x 52cm) |