How you can use this image
This image is available to be shared and re-used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (CC BY-NC-ND).
You can reproduce this image for non-commercial purposes and you are not able to change or modify it in any way.
Wherever you reproduce the image you must attribute the original creators (acknowledge the original artist(s) and the person/organisation that took the photograph of the work) and any other rights holders.
Review our guidance pages which explain how you can reuse images, how to credit an image and how to find more images in the public domain or with a Creative Commons licence available.
DownloadNotes
Add or edit a note on this artwork that only you can see. You can find notes again by going to the ‘Notes’ section of your account.
This is one of a pair with 'Reapers' (Tate Gallery T02257). They were the only works Stubbs exhibited in 1786, and his first exhibited pictures since 1782. He had painted earlier versions of the subjects, in oil on panel, in 1783 (National Trust, Bearsted Collection, Upton House). For his second versions, Stubbs improved the compositions, reorganising the groupings and increasing the number of figures from four in 'Haymakers' and five in 'Reapers' to seven in each of the 1785 paintings. He reordered the landscape elements, thereby altering the lighting and overall mood of the scenes. The pictures were most likely based on preliminary drawings made from nature, which he then rearranged to suit the design. Numerous studies and drawings of the subjects were included in the artist's posthumous sale, although they are now lost.
Stubbs announced his intention to engrave the pictures in 1788–1789, publishing the engravings in 1791. He later adapted the subjects to three oval versions painted in enamel: 'Haymaking', 1794 (Lady Lever Art Gallery, Port Sunlight), 'Haymakers', 1795 (Lady Lever Art Gallery) and 'Reapers', 1795 (Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut). Picturesque rural subjects were popular during this period, and had been depicted by Gainsborough, Wheatley and Morland and some of the many illustrators of Thomson's 'Seasons'. Stubbs's 'Haymakers' is similar to an oval scene on the same theme painted in watercolour by Thomas Hearne, 'A Landscape and Figures' from Thomson's 'Seasons' of 1783 (Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester). This suggests that the two artists may have studied the same scene, or that Stubbs borrowed from Hearne the images of the girl pausing in front of the haycart with her hayrake upright, the woman raking in hay, and the man on top of the cart. Hearne's picture was exhibited at the Society of Artists in 1783, but Stubbs chose not to exhibit his early versions of 'Haymakers' and 'Reapers' that year, possibly to avoid the inevitable comparisons.
The pictures' unsentimental yet sympathetic observation of work in the countryside, with little or no narrative content, is reminiscent of Stubbs's earlier depictions of groups of grooms and stable-lads rubbing down horses. The location of the scenes has not been identified. It is possibly in the south midlands, although such scenes could have been witnessed in fields on the outskirts of London, within a few miles of Stubbs's house at Somerset Street, London. Ozias Humphry noted in his manuscript 'Memoir of Stubbs' (Liverpool Central Libraries) that the artist was accustomed to walk eight or nine miles a day.
Further reading: Basil Taylor, 'Stubbs', London 1971, p.213, reproduced pl.103 Judy Egerton, 'George Stubbs 1724–1806', exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1984, reprinted 1996, pp.166–168, reproduced p.166 in colour Terry Riggs January 1998
Title
Haymakers
Date
1785
Medium
Oil on wood
Measurements
H 89.5 x W 135.3 cm
Accession number
T02256
Acquisition method
Purchased with assistance from the Friends of the Tate Gallery, the Art Fund, The Pilgrim Trust and subscribers 1977
Work type
Painting
Inscription description
date inscribed