Works
Biography
Herbert Haseltine was born in Rome, Italy, on 10 April 1877. He was the son of the landscape painter William Stanley Haseltine, with whom he studied. His early interest in horses dates from 1889, when Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show performed in Rome. In 1893 Haseltine's parents sent him to the United States to attend the Westminster School, then in Dobbs Ferry, NY. He then attended Harvard University in Cambridge, MA, and after his graduation in 1899 he went to Europe with Weber and William T. Richards to study in Düsseldorf, Prussia (now Germany).

In 1900 he went to Paris, France, to study at the Académie Julian; in 1902 he returned to Italy and played polo and fox hunted for three years, then in 1905 pursued further study in Paris with Aimé-Nicholas Morot, who suggested he try sculpture in order to improve his understanding of composition and form. His first effort, a group of two polo players in action entitled Riding Off, won an honorable mention at the Paris Salon of 1906. Another polo sculpture exhibited in the following year added to his budding reputation, and he received several commissions from racehorse owners and horse fanciers in Europe and the United States, including among them former King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra of England and Prince Schönburg-Hartenstein of Vienna, Austria, and among the latter Harry Payne Whitney, a noted horseman and the husband of sculptor Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, who commissioned a bronze of the Meadow Brook polo team.

Haseltine lived in France for most of his life. In the period directly preceding the First World War, he continued filling commissions for equestrian sculpture, and around 1912 began work on the first of several versions of an ideal thoroughbred horse. During the First World War he inspected prisoner-of-war camps in Europe and North Africa and then, after the United States entered the war, headed the American camouflage section. Immediately after the war he produced two sculptures showing the lot of the war horse: Le Soixante Quinze, showing horses and men maneuvering a heavy artillery piece, and Les Revenants, showing a line of gassed and wounded horses returning from the front.

During the inter-bellum period Haseltine, prompted by his friend and fellow sculptor Jo Davidson, became interested in what he called "the plastic beauty of Egyptian sculpture." He adopted a smoother style that was somewhat less representative and more suggestive than his previous work; he also started using colored stone to highlight the tone and texture of the coats of his animal subjects. In the 1920s he began his series "British Champion Animals", which eventually consisted of twenty-six sculptures; he modeled the premier examples of the popular breeds of cow, sheep, horse, and pig in Britain in various materials, using his new style to great effect. At the same time he continued to work as an equine portraitist on commission, going as far as India, where he executed a twelve-foot high equestrian statue of the founder of the house of the Maharaja of Nawangar as well as a limestone sculpture of the Indian state bullocks. He also modeled the heads of the Maharaja's favorite Arabian stallion and mare, which Barbara Hutton commissioned in the late 1940s in 24-karat gold ornamented with over 300 gemstones. Haseltine was not permitted to exhibit these 15-inch sculptures because his patron was embarrassed by the enormous sum she had spent on them.

In 1940, Haseltine moved to New York City to escape the onslaught of the Second World War. In that year the wife of the owner of Man o'War, Mrs. Samuel D. Riddle, commissioned Haseltine to execute a portrait of the champion racehorse. Haseltine completed the monumental bronze sculpture in 1947, the year Man o'War died. The sculpture was placed over the horse's grave at Riddle's Faraway Farm in Lexington, KY; both the horse's remains and the monument were moved to the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington in 1977.

Haseltine continued to work in New York City until July of 1947, when he returned to Paris. He completed his final version of The (Perfect) Thoroughbred Horse in 1949 and continued to accept commissions from horse owners. In 1956 he modeled an equestrian group of George Washington mounted on a horse likened to Man o' War, which stands on the grounds of the Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul (National Cathedral) in Washington, DC.

Haseltine was a member of the National Academy of Design, the National Institute of Arts and Letters, and the National Sculpture Society, all in New York City, and other societies. He was awarded the Legion of Honor by the government of France for his work in the First World War. He exhibited horse sculptures and works from his British Champion Animals series at the National Academy of Design and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia; he also exhibited at the Paris Salon and at other locations throughout the United States and Europe.
Enquire

Send me more information on Herbert Haseltine

Please fill in the fields marked with an asterisk
By submitting this form you will be added to our mailing list.

* denotes required fields

In order to respond to your enquiry, we will process the personal data you have supplied in accordance with our privacy policy (available on request). You can unsubscribe or change your preferences at any time by clicking the link in our emails.