George Soper’s horse paintings capture the dynamic energy and quiet grace of these noble animals, often set within rural landscapes. His detailed brushwork and sensitive observation reveal a deep appreciation for the horse’s role in traditional country life.
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George Soper’s horse paintings capture the dynamic energy and quiet grace of these noble animals, often set within rural landscapes. His detailed brushwork and sensitive observation reveal a deep appreciation for the horse’s role in traditional country life.
This download features 18 hi-res images in JPEG format by the British artist George Soper.
The images are all 600dpi and range in size from 3633 pixels wide/tall to 5782 pixels wide/tall.
The pictures are out of copyright and in the public domain, so you are free to use them in whatever way you’d like, including commercial use.
George Soper (1870-1942) was an English illustrator and etcher whose work appears in books, magazines and journals, including Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, The Water Babies, Lamb’s Tales from Shakespeare, Robinson Crusoe, Arabian Nights, Tanglewood Tales, and Grimm’s Fairy Tales. Soper is best known for his images from the late nineteenth century onwards that depict rural life in Britain, often featuring horses. He was selected to exhibit at the Royal Academy when just 19, and continued to exhibit there most years for the rest of his life.
George Soper was born on 2 May 1870 in South Hornsey, Middlesex and attended a boarding school in Ramsgate.
Although Soper had little or no formal training as an artist he began working as an illustrator in Ramsgate, where he became friends with Frank Short, a civil engineer and member of South Kensington School of Art. Short recognised Soper's ability and tutored him from 1902 onwards. Soper quickly developed a reputation as an expert artist and printmaker and began illustrating for books and magazines. By the 1920s, he had developed a recognisable and varied set of skills covering watercolours, wood cutting, engraving, etching and drypoint and had dedicated his art to capturing the lives of manual workers, including farmers, fisherman and shepherds. He realised that this way of life was slowly disappearing, to be replaced by mechanisation and other technology or trades.
Soper married Ada in 1897 and the couple moved to Harmer Green, near Welwyn in Hertfordshire where he built a house, later known as Wilding. The couple had two daughters: Eva Lilian, born in 1901 and Eileen Alice (1905-1990).
The older daughter Eva also became an artist, printmaker and modeller although it was younger daughter Eileen who was the more famous of the Soper artists. She had been taught by her father, showed flair and talent in etching, and when 15 became the youngest artist ever to exhibit at the Royal Academy. George's nephew Vernon Soper also became an artist.
George Soper was elected to the membership of the Royal Society of Painter-Engravers in 1920 and continued working until his death in August 1942.