May 302025
 

The Mound, Edinburgh EH2 2EL

Limestone building with blue and green banners, green fence, light posts, flags and steps up.
Entry to the National Gallery of Scotland © Alli Spring

This is the largest painting in Scotland, and it is by an American artist.  The full title is ‘Alexander III of Scotland Rescued from the Fury of a Stag by the Intrepidity of Colin Fitzgerald.’ The artist was Benjamin West, who hailed from Pennsylvania, and five years after his arrival in London in 1768, he was elected as a founder-member of the Royal Academy of Arts, having become an established portraitist and painter of historical subjects. His painting of ‘Death of a Stag’ created a sensation when it was exhibited at the Royal Academy in London in 1786. Quite apart from its huge size (it measures some 12 feet high by 17 feet wide), it proved to be a powerful piece of dynastic propaganda for Francis Humberston Mackenzie, the last hereditary chieftain of the Seaforth line of Clan Mackenzie.

Massive painting of men (with horses) killing a stag hung on a red wall.
‘The Death of a Stag’ painting © Alli Spring

The painting was produced on the scale of a royal or state commission, at a price equivalent to West’s annual stipend as official history painter to King George III. It shows an incident which supposedly took place during a royal hunt near Kincardine in the later 13th century, in which Colin Fitzgerald wrestled a furious stag to its knees before dispatching it with his spear. It may be seen as a skillfully stage-managed and politically-driven celebration of the preservation of the monarchy by the legendary ancestor of the Clan Mackenzie. 

Small informational plaque with details on the American artist, Benjamin West.
Information about artist Benjamin West © Alli Spring

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