Best in show: canine art at the Kennel Club


Dog portraits, as a genre, tend towards the anthropomorphic, the sentimental, the kitsch – dogs being comical, or excessively loyal. There was plenty of that sort of thing, much of which can be laid at Edwin Landseer’s door, in ‘Portraits of Dogs: From Gainsborough to Hockney’ at the Wallace Collection earlier this year, though that show also contained some marvellous works of observation: Leonardo sketches of a dog’s paws, the Roman stone dogs known as the Townley Greyhounds, a Maltese terrier by Stubbs. At the Kennel Club dogs are, for the most part, being celebrated as exceptional specimens of their kind; the art may flatter, but the dogs are not furry substitutes for humans. On the left as you enter is one of Landseer’s better dog paintings, on long-term loan from the Tate: A Distinguished Member of the Humane Society (1831), supposedly a portrait of Bob, a celebrated Newfoundland who over the course of 14 years saved 23 people from drowning in the Thames. (The accompanying label explains that Landseer couldn’t get hold of Bob, so this is actually a portrait of another Newfoundland named Paul Pry.) Around the corner is a print of Arthur Wardle’s painting The Totteridge XI (1897), representing 11 of the fox terriers famously bred by Francis Redmond at Totteridge in north London; the original is upstairs in the members’ room, but this print is paired with a show lead worn by one of the dogs, Ch. Donna Fortune (Ch. for Champion). Across from there, a painting from 1906 by Margaret Collyer of Ch. Fair Weather, a celebrated Old English sheepdog, sits above a cabinet containing all the medals she won, a haul that would impress a Soviet field-marshal. On a low table nearby is a bronze by Patsi Ann, a specialist in dog sculpture, of Ch. Cracknor Cause Celebre, a Norfolk terrier who was Crufts Best in Show in 2005 – she’s portrayed standing on her hind legs with her forepaws held up against her chest, a pose she reportedly enjoyed, though it makes her look rather like a child in a dog costume. (Not enough is made of the inventive madness of dogs’ show names: Crufts winners since then have included Araki Fabulous Willy, Hungargunn Bear It’n Mind, Afterglow Maverick Sabre – who sounds like a selection of men’s colognes – and McVan’s To Russia With Love.)

The Totteridge XI (1897), Arthur Wardle. Photo: courtesy of The Royal Kennel Club

At the moment, the gallery has a display marking the Kennel Club’s 150th anniversary, which includes trophies, officials’ badges, photographs, an old stud-book, and miscellaneous mementos of the part played by women in the club’s history (despite not being admitted as full members until the 1970s) and its long association with the royal family, one of the few other institutions quite so interested in pedigree. There are also objects that predate the club’s founding: R. Marshall’s painting of An Early Canine Meeting (1855) shows the weekly assembly of Jemmy Shaw’s dog club at the Queen’s Head on Piccadilly, top-hatted men, some puffing on long-stemmed clay pipes, some small dogs and, on the walls, pictures of other dogs, such as the ratter Billy, a one-eyed bull terrier who in 1823 killed 100 rats in five and a half minutes, a record that remained unbroken for 39 years. Even further back – much further back – the oldest objects in the gallery are a Roman bronze dog amulet, mudlarked along the Thames a few years ago, and a first-century silver coin with a wiry dog on the obverse, minted for the British leader Cunobelinus, whose name is usually translated as something like ‘strong dog’. It’s a reminder that the roots of dog-owning and dog-loving go deep; in comparison, the Kennel Club, at 150 years old, is little more than a pup.

From the December 2023 issue of Apollo. Preview and subscribe here.





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