Lot Essay
Throughout her practice, Frink was preoccupied by the relationship between humanity and nature, and animals were a subject to which she returned frequently. She was particularly concerned with the close relationship and interdependence between humans and domestic animals, and having grown up in the rural Suffolk, had seen firsthand this close bond. Over her career, she produced numerous renderings of both horses and dogs, animals which fascinated her ‘because they’ve been man’s best friend for thousands of years’, and Frink began to explore in depth the nature of an inter-specie relationship which has been depicted in art for centuries (E. Frink, quoted in A. Ratuszniak, Elisabeth Frink, Catalogue Raisonné of Sculpture 1947-93, Farnham, 2013, p. 4).
In the final decade of her career, it was dogs that held a particularly important place in Frink’s practice, reflecting perhaps her own life surrounded by animals at Woolland House, nestled in the countryside of Dorset. There her husband, Alex Csáky kept Hungarian gun dogs named Vizslas, golden-red athletic dogs, which undoubtedly provided inspiration for her works. With their rich colour and elegant musculature, these animals were ideal for translation into bronze. Frink carefully observed the behaviour of these hounds, and their expressive potential.
Life size pieces Large Dog (1986) and Dog (1992) depict these creatures as animated hounds who interact and appear to greet the viewer. The two life size versions of the seated hound Leonardo's Dog I, and Leonardo's Dog II were created in 1991 and 1992 respectively after a visit to the Chateau de Cloux near Amboise, the last residence of Leonardo da Vinci, where he died in 1519. Two stone dogs guard the entrance to the chateau and wait for their master to return.
Edward Lucie-Smith records the differences in Frink's handling of these dog sculptures, 'Leonardo's Dog, though apparently similar to her earlier dog sculptures, represents an interesting technical development. It is far more solid, more apparently weighty than any of its predecessors. In this sense it bears a strong resemblance to the great War Horse for Chatsworth, also a late work. From a stylistic point of view, it represents the final renunciation of the attenuated forms which had typified her early sculpture. The mood, too, is different. The seated dog waits calmly for whatever time will bring - the anxiety which fills some of the earlier sculpture is here entirely absent' (E. Lucie-Smith, Elisabeth Frink: Sculpture Since 1984 and Drawings, London, 1994, p. 20).