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Council’s near £50k contract for ‘horse sculpture trail’

A council has awarded almost £50,000 to support a horse-themed art scheme.

North Lincolnshire Council awarded it in February to a Derbyshire-based company, with the contract simply titled “Horse Sculpture Trail”. The contract is to support an exciting exhibition at Normanby Hall.

It is to celebrate the 300th anniversary of the birth of revered British artist George Stubbs. The artist, known for his equestrian paintings, also spent part of his life in North Lincolnshire.

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Wild in Art was awarded £46,880 in the horse sculpture trail contract by the council, which lasts until November. Since March 1, the exhibition on George Stubbs has been open to the public, and will remain so until January 5, 2025.

The horse sculpture trail is to support the exhibition at Normanby Hall, and will involve engagement with local schools to create their own artworks. Normanby Hall Country Park is managed by the council within its North Lincolnshire Museums portfolio.

Two of Stubbs’ patrons were Sir Henry and Lady Nelthorpe of Baysgarth House, Barton-upon-Humber. Stubbs artwork included pioneering sketchwork on obstetrics and horse anatomy. This included the publication of the book ‘The Anatomy of the Horse’.

All of Stubbs’ preliminary work – the physical dissecting, and the illustrating of many horse carcasses in several stage of dissection – was done in Horkstow, eight miles away from Normanby Country Hall Park.

The exhibition focuses particularly on this connection to North Lincolnshire. The stables at the country park highlights Stubbs’ images of horses and includes George, a life-sized horse model, painted to show the bones and muscles, by Gillian Higgins from Horses Inside Out. The ground floor of Normanby Hall includes nine modern-day artworks on the theme of Stubbs and the horse. There is also a gallery of the history of the side saddle through women’s costume.

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Original artice: https://www.grimsbytelegraph.co.uk/all-about/scunthorpe

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