Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 10

English School 19th Century
Fox trying to hunt a goldfinch

$1,535.43
£1,125
€1,310.93
CA$2,118.20
A$2,320.08
CHF 1,221.52
MX$27,689.40
NOK 15,567.22
SEK 14,230.78
DKK 9,796.17

About the Item

This charming 19th-century English School painting captures a lively woodland scene with the dramatic intensity typical of Victorian animal studies. At the centre, a fox bursts forward from the mouth of its den, its teeth bared and expression animated, painted with warm russet tones and careful attention to the texture of its fur. Above, perched on a delicate branch, a small songbird looks on—its presence adding both a touch of narrative tension and an element of natural poetry. The composition blends animal portraiture with a gently romanticised landscape. In the distance, a lone figure walks along a winding path beneath soft, atmospheric light—an approach common in English art of the period, where pastoral backdrops enhanced the storytelling quality of animal subjects. The artist employs the characteristic techniques of the Victorian era: warm earth colours, smooth transitions of light and shadow, and fine, illustrative detailing, particularly visible in the foliage and the carefully modelled features of the fox. Works of this type were popular throughout the 19th century, reflecting both a fascination with the British countryside and a growing appreciation for expressive animal painting. This piece is a wonderful example of that tradition—rich in character, mood, and narrative charm. The painting has been relined. Framing options available,
  • Creator:
    English School 19th Century
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 19.69 in (50 cm)Width: 23.63 in (60 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Period:
  • Framing:
    Framing Options Available
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    GB
  • Reference Number:
    Seller: B941stDibs: LU2841217317472

More From This Seller

View All
Pair of hunting scenes, by Henry Barraud, 19th century
By Henry Barraud
Located in GB
Sold as a pair/Final price is for two paintings of 'Hunting scenes" by Henry Barraud (1811–1874), a British painter best known for his portraits, genre scenes, and animal paintings, ...
Category

19th Century Animal Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Two dogs chasing a duck overt the water, attributed to Robert Cleminson
By Robert Cleminson
Located in GB
This lively sporting composition, attributed to Robert Cleminson, portrays two dogs in vigorous pursuit of a duck soaring above a tranquil lake or river. The moment of flight is capt...
Category

Late 19th Century Animal Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

End of the fox hunting day. Hunter with his horse trying to open a gate, signed
Located in GB
Richard Henry Brock (1871–1943) often known as "Dick" Brock, was born on July 21, 1871, in Colney Hatch, London. His family moved to Cambridge shortly after his birth, where his fath...
Category

Early 20th Century English School Animal Paintings

Materials

Panel, Oil

Man after a donkey, English School 19th century
Located in GB
Painted in a charming naïve style, this work captures a rustic domestic scene set in the English countryside. At the heart of the composition is a cottage, its doorway animated by a ...
Category

19th Century Landscape Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Children playing with a donkey
By George Harvey
Located in GB
Sir George Harvey was a prominent Scottish painter, born on 1 February 1806 in St Ninians (now Stirling), the son of a watchmaker. Although he initially apprenticed as a bookseller i...
Category

19th Century English School Figurative Paintings

Materials

Oil, Board

Cottage by a lake, English School, 19th century
By English School
Located in GB
This tranquil country scene depicts a cottage nestled within lush greenery, its rustic roofline partially hidden by a towering tree that dominates the foreground. Behind the cottage,...
Category

19th Century Landscape Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

You May Also Like

19th Century English Painting "Fox Hunting"
Located in Scottsdale, AZ
19th Century English Painting "Fox Hunting". Beautiful scene of a hunt in action. See photos.
Category

Antique 19th Century English Victorian Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Paint

Foxhunting oil painting attributed to Thomas Ivester Lloyd
By Thomas Ivester Lloyd
Located in London, GB
John Ivester Lloyd (1873 - 1942) Foxhunting Oil on board 20 x 36 cm A huntsman and hounds pass through a dark wood. Thomas Ivester Lloyd (1873 - 1942) was born in Liverpool. During...
Category

Early 20th Century Animal Paintings

Materials

Oil, Board

Vigilant Fox - The psyche of the fox -
Located in Berlin, DE
Carl Friedrich Deiker (1838 Wetzlar - 1892 Düsseldorf). Vigilant fox. Pencil drawing on brown paper, 18 × 29.5 cm (inside measurement), 31.5 x 43.5 cm (mount), signed and dated "Deiker [18]54" at lower right. - a little bit stained, with a light water stain at lower right About the artwork Carl Friedrich Deiker's consummate ability to depict animals is already evident in this early work. He brought a whole new psychological dimension to animal painting, so that one could literally speak of animal portraits. The naturalistic appearance of the fox alone makes it seem alive. Every strand of muscle, even every hair, is captured, which requires an intensive artistic study of animal anatomy and physiology. But the fox's real liveliness comes not from its natural appearance, but from its internal movement: Stretched out, it has been brought out of rest. It turns around and, with its ears pricked up, looks intently in the direction from which it has seen something. His mouth is slightly open and his pointed teeth are bared, as if he were growling. Tension gradually takes hold of his whole body. While the hind legs were still in a relaxed position, closely observed by Deiker, one front leg was already raised, ready to begin a rising movement. The fox seems so alarmed with all its senses that one gets the impression that, at any moment, its tail will move jerkily and the animal will jump up. While wild animals have traditionally been portrayed as beasts or anthropomorphised, often for caricatural purposes, Deiker explores their inherent nature by attempting to capture their psychic impulses. The wild animal is neither bestial nor human, but a creature in its own right, valued by Deiker for its own sake. In this way, he brought the dignity of the animal into representation and raised animal painting to a whole new artistic level. About the artist Carl Friedrich Deiker was the son of the drawing teacher Christian Friedrich Deiker and the younger brother of the animal painter Johannes Deiker. In addition to the family art lessons, Christian Friedrich shared a studio with his brother Johannes at Braunfels Castle, Deiker attended the drawing academy in Hanau, and from 1858 he was a student at the Karlsruhe Art Academy, where he studied under the landscape painter Johann Wilhelm Schirmer. Carl Friedrich Deiker was already in demand as an artist during his first year: Grand Duke Frederick I of Baden, Margrave Max of Baden and Grand Duke Michael of Russia bought hunting scenes by him. In 1859 he went on a study trip to the Reinhardswald. Just as the Barbizon School had rediscovered the landscape, Deiker opened up the forest for animal painting. From 1861-64 Deiker had his own studio in Karlsruhe, then moved to Düsseldorf, where his brother Johannes followed four years later. Deiker married a daughter of the landscape painter Karl Hilger and remained in Düsseldorf until his death. In 1868 he finally achieved international fame with his painting 'Pursued Noble Deer' and was regarded as a virtuoso new founder of animal painting. "Deiker brought for the first time a truly great artistic quality to animal painting [...]". - Hans Vollmer From 1870 he participated in the academic art exhibitions in Berlin, Dresden, Munich and Hanover. He was also very busy as an illustrator. He drew for the Gartenlaube, the Salon, the Universum, and produced many of the finely illustrated hunting and animal books of the period. He also worked as a printmaker, while his oil paintings circulated as reprints by Franz Dinger. From 1865 to 1892 Deiker was a member of the artists' association Malkasten. Carl Friedrich Deiker's life's work was honoured with a large posthumous memorial exhibition at the Düsseldorf Kunsthalle in 1892. His son Carl Deiker, born in 1879, also became a painter. Selection of art museums that own works by Carl Friedrich Deiker: Hamburger Kunsthalle / Kunsthalle Karlsruhe / Kunstmuseum Düsseldorf / Wallraff Richartz Cologne. Selected Bibliography H. Schmidt: Johannes and...
Category

1850s Naturalistic Animal Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

Terriers and Fox in Woodland 19th century
By George Armfield
Located in Hillsborough, NC
The Fox and Three Terriers in a woodland landscape is by renowned animal and landscape artist George Armfield (1810-1893). Armfield is known for his paintings of Spaniels and Terrie...
Category

19th Century Romantic Animal Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

The Hunting Fox - Lithograph by Paul Gervais - 1854
By Paul Gervais
Located in Roma, IT
The Hunting Fox is an original lithograph on ivory-colored paper, realized by Paul Gervais (1816-1879). The artwork is from The Series of "Les Trois Règn...
Category

1850s Modern Animal Prints

Materials

Paper, Lithograph

A Hunting Scene - Original Lithograph - Late 19th Century
Located in Roma, IT
A Hunting Scene is a color lithograph realized by an anonymous artist in the late 19th century. Good conditions, except for usual signs of aging. The artwork shows a hunting scene involving three animals indicated with the alphabet letters...
Category

Late 19th Century Animal Prints

Materials

Lithograph