|
Home | Current Issue | Back Issues | Subscribe | Advertisers | Submissions | Contact |
|||
|
|
Pegasus Without Wings by Helga Jaunegg
Its magnificent setting in the hilly landscape in Western Styria with view to the mountains is the ideal location for breeding Europe’s oldest cultural breed of horses, the Lipizzans. Since 1920 Federal Stud Piber is the birthplace of the famous white stallions of the Spanische Hofreitschule – the Spanish Riding School – in Vienna. Each time I visit Piber I do many drawings from life and take some photographs at different times of the day for additional reference. The number of attractive motifs seems infinite. I fill a sketchbook with studies of Lipizzans, impressions of the beautiful landscape, buildings and figures, and try out compositional ideas. Some of these concepts become source material for my paintings, done in a traditional way by building up layers on toned linen. The foals especially fascinate me, and there are up to fifty foals born in Piber every year. When watching only three-week-old colts demonstrating their talent for movement, you can already see their natural disposition for certain moves. But it is a long road from the colts’ jumps in Piber to the perfection of the High School Figures of the Ballet of the White Stallions in Vienna. The young horses spend the summer months of their third year in the stud’s own alpine pastures before promising stallions are selected for the Spanish Riding School. In the following months they will be introduced to their first training lessons in Piber before the four-year-old stallions move to Vienna; there the best ones will be trained into High School horses. This training can last up to eight years. The result of years of training is presented at gala performances in the magnificent baroque Winter Riding Hall and at other shows worldwide. It is an unforgettable experience to marvel at the harmony between horse and rider, especially in the historical environment. And when the Lipizzans demonstrate the Airs – the Levade, Capriole or Courbette – in the course of the show, one could swear that invisible wings enable them to do these powerful and elegant movements. Visit Helga Jaunegg's web site at www.equus-art.com. |
|
|
|
Home | Current Issue | Back Issues | Subscribe | Advertisers | Submissions | Contact |
|||
|
|
|||