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58:. His father was an amateur artist and art dealer, whose other business dealings (as a banker, goldsmith, and diamond merchant) afforded young Seymour the leisure time to study art on his own, either his father's or the art at the Virtuosi Club of St. Luke - a gentleman's club his father belonged to, specializing in art. In a short time the boy was a self-taught artist, familiar with many of the prominent artists of the period.
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early on, and before long found himself absorbed in the sport - drawing, painting, owning, breeding, and racing horses. His art proved popular among the prominent sporting families of the day, eventually garnering
Seymour patrons in Sir William Jolliffe and
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led to his financial ruin, Seymour still ranks among the most important early sporting artists, together with
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32:(1702–1752) was an English painter, widely recognized for his
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being considered one of the three founders of the sporting school.
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Seymour's love of art was matched only by his love of
25:Huntsmen and their hounds by James Seymour, 1750
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141:23 artworks by or after James Seymour
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186:18th-century English male artists
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