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A Random Shot

Painting by Edwin Landseer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Random Shot
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A Random Shot is an 1848 oil painting by the British artist Edwin Landseer. It depicts a snow-covered mountaintop in the Highlands of Scotland, where a deer struck by a random shot of a hunter has managed to reach before dying. A fawn nuzzles against her forlornly.

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Deers as victims on man's aggression had been a theme running through Landscapes work during the decade. In this case it shows the violation of the unwritten rule that a female deer with young should never be shot.[1] The artist drew inspiration for the painting from a passage in Walter Scott's The Lord of the Isles. Landseer added the snow at a late stage in order to heighten the emotion of the scene.[2]

The work may have been commissioned by Prince Albert, but ended up in the collection of Thomas Wrigley.[3] the picture was displayed at the Royal Academy Exhibition of 1848 at the National Gallery in London, where it attracted a great deal of attention. [4] Today the painting is in the Bury Art Museum in Greater Manchester, having been acquired in 1897. [5]

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