Skating


"The Reverend Robert Walker Skating on Duddingston Loch" 
(The Skating Minister)
by Henry Raeburn (c. 1795) 
In the possession of The Scottish National Gallery in Edinburgh.

I first saw this painting when I was a university student up in Scotland. When killing time before catching trains south or up to Stirling, I would sometimes visit The National Gallery and this rather quirky  picture impressed me though I couldn't explain why.

He's like a silhouette as he moves effortlessly over the ice. He knows how to skate but he's very nonchalant about it. There's something of a tension between the staid formality of  his vocation and the  freedom of travelling smoothly over a frozen lake. He appears to cast no shadow.

There's a wild and slightly brooding fluidity about the background but Reverend Walker himself is rather  statuesque - frozen in that moment.

The picture stayed in Robert Walker's family for over a hundred and fifty years before it was brought to the attention of the public and art historians alike round about 1950.  It is now much treasured and the image features on postcards, ceramic mugs, posters, tea towels and T-shirts.  The Reverend Robert Walker  and Henry Raeburn would have both been astonished.

Duddingston Loch is a small fresh water lake in Edinburgh, close to Holyrood Park. I think the background suggests somewhere more remote than that.



from Yorkshire Pudding https://ift.tt/qtFsue5

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