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By experimenting with the unusual technique of applying enamel to earthenware, then firing it to produce a finished ceramic plaque, George Stubbs hoped to make paintings for the ages, as durable as stone. These plaques were part of a collaboration with the master potter Josiah Wedgwood, who jokingly referred to himself as Stubbs’s 'canvas maker'. This scene of wheat harvesting, which Stubbs developed in earlier oil paintings, shows his taste for orderly, relief-like composition. Reapers also gives an idealized view of agricultural labour in a period when farm workers experienced widespread poverty and hardship. The three men and one woman who cut and gather the wheat are neatly – even fashionably – dressed, and their movements are graceful and seemingly effortless.

Title

Reapers

Date

1795

Medium

enamel on Wedgwood biscuit earthenware

Measurements

H 76.8 x W 102.9 cm

Accession number

B1981.25.618

Acquisition method

Paul Mellon Collection

Work type

Painting

Signature/marks description

signed and dated, lower right: Geo : stubbs pinx | 1795

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