Scott Leighton Art
Scott Leighton (1847–98) was considered a master of equine art. Having started out in the horse trade to support his artistic ambitions, he had intimate knowledge of his subject. Leighton was considered by many to be the “Landseer of the United States,” a reference to the noted British landscape and portrait artist Edwin Henry Landseer.
Leighton’s work was able to reach an even wider audience with the rise in popularity of lithography. Numerous firms transferred his original paintings into mass-marketable prints. However, it was his work with Currier & Ives that brought him the most notice. More than 30 of his paintings were used by these distinguished lithographers to produce memorable prints of trotters Hopeful, Maud S., Smuggler and Edward & Swiveller, among others. Leighton exhibited in the National Academy of Design in 1883, 1886 and 1887. His paintings are in the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Francine Clark Institute and more.
1880s Other Art Style Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph
1980s Contemporary Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph, Paper
Mid-20th Century Minimalist Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph
1980s Contemporary Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph, Paper
1960s Modern Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph
1940s American Modern Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph
1960s Modern Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph
1930s Ashcan School Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph
1940s American Modern Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph
1950s Modern Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph
1980s Contemporary Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph, Paper
1970s Modern Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph
1960s Modern Scott Leighton Art
Lithograph