Shipfitters, Tyneside
About this artwork
Next to Clydeside, Tyneside was the largest shipbuilding centre in Britain and Tudor-Hart photographed men and boys at work in the fitting yards. This image was part of a commission by, but not reproduced in, the ‘Geographical Magazine’, perhaps because it suggested rather traditional forms of labour. However, the article was upbeat about the enterprise of the local workforce which possessed innate skill “in engine design and mastery of tools”. As its author concluded: “go to sea, and practically every good marine engineer you meet will be a Tynesider, if he is not a Scotsman!”
Updated before 2020
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artist:Edith Tudor-HartAustrian (1908 - 1973)
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title:Shipfitters, Tyneside
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date created:Photographed about 1937
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printed by:Owen LoganScottish (born 1963)
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materials:Gelatin silver print
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measurements:28.30 x 27.70 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Presented by Wolfgang Suschitzky 2004
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accession number:PGP 279.49B
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gallery:
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subject:
Edith Tudor-Hart
Edith Tudor-Hart
Edith Tudor-Hart, née Suschitzky, was one of the most significant documentary photographers working in Britain in the 1930s and 1940s. Born in Vienna, she grew up in radical Jewish circles. Edith married Alex Tudor-Hart, a British doctor, and the pair moved to England. There she worked as a...