The 16th The Queen's Lancers - The Scarlet Lancers, A Snaffles Original, 1925
The 16th The Queen's Lancers - The Scarlet Lancers, A Snaffles Original, 1925
The 16th The Queen's Lancers - The Scarlet Lancers, A Snaffles Original, 1925
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, The 16th The Queen's Lancers - The Scarlet Lancers, A Snaffles Original, 1925
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, The 16th The Queen's Lancers - The Scarlet Lancers, A Snaffles Original, 1925
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, The 16th The Queen's Lancers - The Scarlet Lancers, A Snaffles Original, 1925

The 16th The Queen's Lancers - The Scarlet Lancers, A Snaffles Original, 1925

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Overall: 46cm (18in) x 36cm (14in)

Pencil and body colour on paper. Original caricature of an officer of the 16th Lancers in mounted  review order comprising full dress British lancer cap with swan feather plume, scarlet tunic unique to the 16th among the other British lancer regiments, with facings of dark blue, pantaloons with double gold lace stripes, and riding boots; his charger at the canter and wearing a Ukranian black lambskin edged with scalloped red cloth, all of lancer pattern. Titled in the artist’s hand lower right. Signed ‘Snaffles’. Image: 36cm (14in) x 26cm (10.2in). Framed and glazed.

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Charlie Johnson Payne (1884-1967), ‘Snaffles’, was the son of a Warwickshire boot maker turned publican. As a boy ‘Snaffles’ was an avid consumer of Kipling and was fascinated by the yarns of a great uncle who had served in the Crimea. After working as a wine merchant’s clerk and serving in a volunteer battalion of the Oxfordshire Light Infantry, he enlisted in the Royal Garrison Artillery. After lights-out he read Kipling to his mates by candlelight in the barrack room. In the following years he developed his characteristic artistic style and a deepening interest in hunting, racing and polo. He became a regular contributor to periodicals, such as Bystander and the Sporting and Dramatic. Days spent in the hunting field with the Cottesmore provided ample inspiration for his much loved sporting scenes. Following the outbreak of War in 1914, he went to France as an illustrator for The Graphic before entering the Royal Naval Air Service as a rating Motor Mechanic in small coastal motorboats. Later he was commissioned Lieutenant RNVR, and joined the team that developed dazzle camouflage with the Northern Patrol. In 1920 he was made a Chevalier of the Belgian Order of the Crown. His artistic career continued between the wars producing works that often combined military scenes and nostalgic sporting themes.  His work covering the equestrian life in England, Ireland and in the military in India was made extremely popular through the publication of prints that were initially hand coloured and later photographically printed over a fifty year period. Apart from the sale of his sporting prints, he contributed to many magazines and publications. During the Second World War he served in the Home Guard.