Horsemen Colliding by Thomas Rowlandson. A dynamic sepia-toned watercolor drawing depicting a chaotic collision of several men on horseback.

Horsemen Colliding

Thomas Rowlandson

1750 · Watercolor Paint

A lively 18th-century watercolor by Thomas Rowlandson capturing the comedic chaos of a cavalry collision.

$169

For the selected configuration

From $129

4 frame sizes

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Frame color
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Paper type
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Made to order in ~2 business days · Free U.S. standard shipping (typically 5–8 business days after dispatch)

Where it works

A measured piece with active movement with warm, lived-in color — holds a casual room without taking it over.

Often works in
Library · Study · Office
Placement
Works well as a measured horizontal anchor
Walls
Best on mid-tone or darker walls
Color notes
Soft gray, Soft white

About the piece

Attributed to the renowned British caricaturist Thomas Rowlandson, this mid-18th-century watercolor drawing showcases his signature fluid line and satirical wit. The scene captures a moment of frantic energy as horsemen and their mounts collide in a tangle of limbs and expressive faces, rendered in a sophisticated palette of sepia and grey washes on laid paper.