_Hamish Mackie: the sculptor and his passion for wildlife
Should you ever want confirmation that we are a self-obsessed species you need only look at our art: the subject that overwhelms the history of painting and sculpture is
Mackie's spiritual ancestors are the
His career started with companion creatures – portraits of pet dogs and horses – but he soon reached the point at which the prospect of modelling another genial Labrador 'would make me scream' and he turned to the wider and wilder animal world that had always fascinated him.
The only way to truly understand the animals he wanted to sculpt, he decided, was to study them in their proper habitats. So, like a naturalist, he went to Australia for kangaroos, Belgium on the trail of wild boar, Russia for Arctic terns, the Emirates for camels, and Africa over and over again, for buffalo, cheetah, elephants, rhino and buck.
What unites all his work is that his animals are in movement.
'I have an advantage over earlier artists,' Mackie says, 'in
He is not interested in a smooth finish but in one that suggests the hardiness of the animals themselves. The models are then cast in bronze, some tiny – a winsome dung beetle, for example, or an owl that fits on a finger ring – and others life-size, such as a group of unnervingly lifelike Roe deer.
As they should, Mackie's animals roam: some look comfortable in domestic interiors while others, a pair of hares boxing or an otter twisting its head at a noise, work
One of the best places to gauge the impact of Mackie's large-scale works is at the new Berkeley Group residential development at Goodman's Fields at the edge of the City of London.
The site was once a livery surrounded by open fields, a farming area worked by horses and
They rise and crest like a breaking wave, careening through a specially commissioned water feature as though through a river, and bring an extraordinary dynamism to the public space.
Simply as a technical
o make all six, Mackie used 1.5 kilometres of steel armature to support the staggering 6.5 tonnes of clay used for the full-size models. Mackie has worked with the Lockbund Foundry in Oxfordshire for 20 years and its craftsmen are so skilled they can cast half-tonne pieces in one go, yet maintain his fingerprints left in the modelling clay.
The horses required all this experience when casting six tonnes of bronze while still transmitting the vigour and delicacy of Mackie's models.
There is something counter-intuitive about seeing Mackie's wild horses in such a regulated urban setting, but in
As we appreciate the animal world more and more, perhaps we'll come to appreciate animal sculptors as big beasts in the art world too. Mackie though won't predict the future of taste: 'Let's see what stands the test of time.'
If you share the sculptor's appreciation for horses we can help you find the perfect home to cater for your passion. Our Equestrian Property team can advise on racing yards, stud farms, livery yards, riding schools, polo establishments and equestrian centres.