Equus
<div><div><P style="MARGIN: 0in -1.5in 0pt 0in; LINE-HEIGHT: 12.5pt; mso-pagination: none; tab-stops: 8.55pt; mso-layout-grid-align: none"><I>“From the outset I felt quite strongly that I wanted to celebrate the horse in its own right."                                        </I>—Tim Flach, photographer<I></I></P><P style="MARGIN: 0in -1.5in 0pt 0in; LINE-HEIGHT: 120%; mso-pagination: none; mso-layout-grid-align: none"> </P><P style="MARGIN: 0in -1.5in 0pt 0in; LINE-HEIGHT: 12pt; mso-pagination: none; tab-stops: 9.7pt; mso-layout-grid-align: none">No animal has captured the human imagination quite like the horse, depicted in media from cave drawings thousands of years ago through countless renderings in paint, clay, ink, even film. Award-winning photographer Tim Flach's quest to document the horse has resulted in <I>Equus</I>, an intensely moving look at an animal—as solitary subject and en masse, from the air and from underwater—whose history is so powerfully linked to our own.</P><P style="MARGIN: 0in -1.5in 0pt 0in; LINE-HEIGHT: 12pt; mso-pagination: none; tab-stops: 9.7pt; mso-layout-grid-align: none"> </P><P style="MARGIN: 0in -1.5in 0pt 0in; LINE-HEIGHT: 12pt; mso-pagination: none; tab-stops: 9.7pt; mso-layout-grid-align: none">From exquisite Arabians in the Royal Yards of the United Arab Emirates to purebred Icelandic horses in their glacial habitat; from the soulful gaze of a single horse's lash-lined eye to the thundering majesty of thousands of Mustangs racing across the plains of Utah, <I>Equus </I>provides an amazing and unique insight into the physical dynamics and spirit of the horse.</P></div></div>