Jonathan Walker
Description
The Cheeky Pint draws the viewer into one of the most cherished rituals of British life: the unscheduled pause at the village pub. The painting captures a fox settled comfortably inside a country inn, pewter tankard in hand, raised in anticipation of that first long-awaited sip. Dressed in the unmistakable scarlet jacket of the traditional hunting field, paired with cream breeches, a white stock at the throat and well-worn brown riding boots, the fox cuts the figure of a gentleman who has, in a moment of glorious irony, slipped away from the chase for a quiet drink. He is seated on a sturdy oak bench of the kind found in any traditional country pub or coaching inn, the rich grain of the timber set against the shabby turquoise paintwork of a staircase behind him. With his legs stretched out in front and his head tilted slightly upward, he raises the pewter tankard towards his lips in anticipation, taking the unhurried pose of a gentleman with nowhere else to be. The composition is framed by the warm timbers and worn plasterwork of the pub interior, with rich russets, ochres and burnt umbers running through the woodwork, while the cooler turquoise of the painted stairs lends the scene a wonderfully atmospheric depth. Along the bench beside him, two small mice go about their own business, while a hen is tucked beneath the bench, lending the scene that signature touch of mischievous narrative life that collectors of Walker's work have come to adore.
Jonathan Walker's loose, expressive watercolour technique is shown here at its richest, with the pigment allowed to pool and bleed across the paper to give the timberwork, fabric and shadowed interior a wonderfully tactile quality. The reds of the hunting jacket sing against the cooler tones of the painted staircase, while the broken, sketch-like marks across the figure's boots and breeches lend the painting a vivid sense of character. As one of the most recognisable names in contemporary British wildlife art, Walker has built a devoted following of collectors drawn to his rare ability to find the deeply human within the animal world. His paintings imagine a parallel rural society where foxes, badgers, hares and mice adopt human habits and personalities without ever losing their essential wildness, a tradition rooted in the great heritage of British illustration yet entirely contemporary in spirit.