
'Equine Comedy' a collection of the cartoonists work.}
'Pierre Camille Lucien Hilaire Jean Bellocq' (born
November 25,
1926 in
Bedenac,
Charente-Maritime,
France) is a
French-
American artist and
horse racing cartoonist known as "Peb". As a small boy, his family moved to
Maisons-Laffitte where his father worked at the local
race track. There, at a young age Pierre Bellocq used his natural talent to begin creating caricatures of horses and horsepeople. At age 19, the French racing journal ''France Courses'' gave him national exposure when they published one of his cartoons of a
jockey. Bellocq signed the drawing as "Peb", a signature which would become his lifelong moniker. Within a few years Peb was widely known and an emerging artist who also gained recognition for his caricatures on sports advertising
posters.
By 1954, Bellocq's work had achieved international recognition and he was contracted by
Laurel Park owner
John D. Schapiro to do drawings for the inaugural running of the
Washington, D.C., International. He settled in the United States and in early 1955 accepted an offer to work as the staff cartoonist for the Morning Telegraph newspaper and its sister paper, the
Daily Racing Form, a job he has held ever since.
Pierre Bellocq has produced several books; his first consisted of 150 cartoons and was titled ''Peb's Equine Comedy''. It was published by
Random House in 1957 and is still in print. As well, he did the illustrations for the 1969
Joe Hirsch book ''A Treasury of Questions and Answers from the Morning Telegraph and Daily Racing Form''. In 2004, he created drawings for author Ed Hotaling's book on jockey
Jimmy Winkfield whom Bellocq had known personally when the
African American rider was living and racing in his hometown of Maisons-Laffitte, France.
He received the
National Cartoonists Society 1991 Sports Cartoon Award and their 1999 Newspaper Illustration Award. In 1998, the
Daniel Wildenstein Art Gallery in New York held an exhibition of Bellocq's work titled "The Racing World in Sketch and Caricature." From July 24, 2004 until December 31, 2005, the
National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame put on a special exhibition of his works titled "Peb: The Art of Humor" that celebrated his 50th anniversary of horse racing artwork in the United States.
In 2001, when
Churchill Downs began its major renovations, one of the additions to the clubhouse was a 36-foot
mural by Pierre Bellocq depicting all 96 jockeys who had won the
Kentucky Derby from 1875 to 2004. Another Bellocq mural, in the clubhouse of
Belmont Park in
Elmont, New York, depicts the dominant jockeys, trainers and racing personalities of the track's century-long history.
'Books:'
★ ''Peb's Equine Comedy'' (1957)
★ ''Peb 71'' (1971)
★ ''Peb at Keeneland'' (1986)
★ ''Forty years of Peb: The racing world in sketch and caricature'' (1995)
★ ''Peb: The Art of Humor'' (2004)
Pierre Bellocq's sons Rémi and Pierre Jr. are both involved in horse racing. Rémi Bellocq is the Executive Director of the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (NHBPA) and Pierre Bellocq, Jr. is a
Thoroughbred horse trainer at
Santa Anita Park.
References
★
Official website for Peb
★
NHBPA website
★
NCS Awards