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John Frederick Herring Jr19th century English Barnyard, Chickens, Horse, Donkey and Goats in a landscapeCirca 1870
Circa 1870
$6,950
£5,266.63
€6,069.18
CA$9,829.22
A$10,570.50
CHF 5,652.07
MX$127,477.23
NOK 71,474.25
SEK 65,122.25
DKK 45,350.25
About the Item
John Frederick Herring, Junior (British, 1815–1907)
English Barnyard with Horse, Goat, Chickens and Donkey
Oil on canvas, circa 1870
Indistinctly signed lower right
This superbly detailed rural composition by John Frederick Herring Junior captures the harmonious charm of an English farmstead at rest — a moment of rustic tranquillity illuminated by soft daylight and the artist’s sensitive eye for animal character. Painted circa 1870, English Barnyard with Horse, Goat, Chickens and Donkey exemplifies Herring’s transition from the dramatic sporting canvases of his youth to the more intimate, pastoral narratives that defined his mature style.
At the centre of the scene stands a graceful white horse, loosely tethered before a weathered stable and surrounded by an engaging menagerie: a watchful goat, a sturdy donkey, and a lively scattering of hens and cockerels. Sunlight filters gently through the foliage, casting warm tones upon the brick wall and the straw-strewn ground. The textures are meticulously rendered — the sheen of the horse’s coat, the coarseness of the thatch, the play of shadow upon the rustic boards — all testifying to Herring’s masterful brush and deep familiarity with country life.
Herring Junior, son of the celebrated John Frederick Herring Senior, inherited his father’s compositional skill and affection for the English countryside, yet developed a more personal vocabulary marked by quieter sentiment and domestic warmth. His animals are not merely painted with anatomical accuracy but endowed with individuality and repose, reflecting the Victorian ideal of harmony between man, nature, and labour.
The composition is beautifully balanced: the horse forms the noble focus, framed by the darker tones of the shed and balanced by the lively movement of fowl in the foreground. Every element contributes to a sense of peace and order — the rural world portrayed not as toil, but as a timeless pastoral ideal.
Presented in a richly carved and gilded period frame of the mid-nineteenth century, the painting retains the refinement and depth of colour that mark Herring’s finest works. English Barnyard with Horse, Goat, Chickens and Donkey stands as an enduring testament to the Victorian love of rural life, an image both picturesque and sincere — at once a record of husbandry and a celebration of the enduring beauty of the English countryside.
Framed in an amazing 19th century Hand made English frame
- Creator:John Frederick Herring Jr (1820 - 1907, British)
- Creation Year:Circa 1870
- Dimensions:Height: 22 in (55.88 cm)Width: 28 in (71.12 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement Style:
- Period:
- Condition:The painting is in good original condition. It was re-lined about 40 years ago.
- Gallery Location:Woodbury, CT
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU507317134692
John Frederick Herring Jr
John Frederick Herring Jr. was taught by his father, the eminent early 19th century artist J.F. Herring Sr. (1795-1865) who was official Animal Painter to Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Kent. Like Herring Sr., he became a highly successful painter of sporting and animal subjects which were particularly popular with the English aristocracy. The current work is a homage to his father’s famous subject picture of 1850, and possibly commissioned by a patron who had been unable to secure Herring Senior’s original. Between 1860 and 1875 J.F. Herring Jr. exhibited at the Royal Academy, the British Institution, and the Royal Society of British Artists.
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