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The Horse in Art 🐎
On the occasion of the Lunar New Year and the Year of the Horse, explore the story of one of the most iconic animals in art history. From prehistory to modern art, the horse has fascinated artists with its strength, elegance, and symbolic power.

Rosa Bonheur, The Horse Fair, 1852-1855

Did you know that the oldest known depictions of horses date back 36,000 years and can be found in the Chauvet Cave?

Since prehistoric times, horses have fascinated humans. Long before museums and paintings existed, their silhouettes already appeared on cave walls, drawn with careful attention to the animal’s movement and energy. These ancient images reveal a deep connection between humans and the living world.

Over time, the horse became an essential companion in daily life. It accompanied work, travel, war, and hunting, and became a central figure in countless artworks. Paintings and sculptures depict a powerful, controlled, sometimes idealized animal, often associated with strength, courage, or prestige.

But the horse is not only represented as it appears in reality. It also fuels the imagination. In the Middle Ages, it inspired the mythical creature we know as the unicorn. In modern times, artists went even further: the horse became shape, rhythm, and energy, sometimes blending into abstraction, as seen in Kandinsky’s work.

This playlist offers a journey through these transformations—an invitation to discover how, across the centuries, the horse reflects not only our relationship with animals but also the way we see and represent the world.

Discover all the content in the playlist!

Let’s go!

On the agenda
playlist - 10:00
The Horse in Art 🐎
By: Art Explora
podcast - 9:30
The Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius
By: Accessible art history
video - 9:20
The Unicorn Tapestries
By: SmartHistory
video - 11:20
A guide to Van Dyck’s ‘Equestrian Portrait of Charles I’
By: The National Gallery
video - 3:22
5-minute meditation: Rosa Bonheur’s ‘The Horse Fair’
By: The National Gallery
video - 32:45
Unexpected Views: Hannah Quinlan & Rosie Hastings on Uccello’s ‘San Romano’
By: The National Gallery
video - 3:03
Franz Marc, Blue Horses and Der Blaue Reiter
By: Shawn Grenier | The Canvas
video - 5:14
Kandinsky, Improvisation 28 (second version), 1912
By: SmartHistory