Friday, December 10, 2010

Pets of the Belle Époque: “Dot and Cairnach, Skye Terriers” by Otto Weber, 1874

Dot and Cairnach, Skye Terriers
Otto Weber, 1874
The Royal Collection
Royal Academician Otto Weber was appointed portrait painter to The Royal Family in the 1870’s by Queen Victoria. Being as Victoria considered the royal pets to be as much a part of the family as anyone else, she commissioned Weber to paint portraits of her dogs, too.


This 1874 portrait shows two Skye Terriers who lived amongst the other dogs in the royal household. Known as Dot and Cairnach, these spirited companions were known to frolic through the corridors in typical terrier fashion. This wasn’t Cairnach’s first time posing for a portrait. He had previously been painted by Sir Edwin Landseer on several occasions and served as a great source of inspiration for the artist who used the terrier’s visage in quite a few masterpieces.

Curiously, one of Landseer's portraits of Cairnach dates to 1842.  This leads us to believe that unless Cairnach lived to be over thirty-two years old (which would have been quite grand!), the earlier paintings of Cairnach show a different terrier with the same name.  The 1842 round portrait was a Christmas gift to Queen Victoria from Prince Albert.


Cairnach
Sir Edwin Landseer, 1842
The Royal Collection

4 comments:

Frangipan said...

Your blog is very interesting, you have a unique take on art.

Joseph Crisalli said...

Thank you, Frangipan!

Miles said...

The 1842 Cairnach was a Maltese Terrier, not a Skye.

Joseph Crisalli said...

Thank you for clearing that up, Miles.