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The Wolf and Fox Hunt

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Artist
  
Peter Paul Rubens

The Wolf and Fox Hunt imagesmetmuseumorgCRDImagesepweblargeDT5526jpg

Peter Paul Rubens artwork
  
Christ Giving the Keys to St, The Defeat of Sennacherib, The Crowning of the Virt

The Wolf and Fox Hunt is a c.1616 painting by Peter Paul Rubens now held in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. It shows mounted and walking hunters chasing two wolves and three foxes. It marks the beginning of an intensive creative phase in which Rubens focuses on the theme of hunting. The painting on the right is called The Wolf and Fox Hunt. This is the first art by Ruben when he created a market for a new form of art. This is one of the many paintings of very large hunting scenes painted on a canvas. The painting was originally trimmed from the top and the left side as it was too big and it would not fit in any of the houses of the princes. The wolves in the painting are his own creation and work but overall the painting was completed with assistance. This painting by Rubens was considered to be a modern replacement for tapestries which was good as tapestries required a lot more time and money to be completed.

References

The Wolf and Fox Hunt Wikipedia