About this artwork
This sketch of sheep was made by Walton when he was staying at the small village of Cockburnspath in Berwickshire. Walton and Guthrie first stayed in the village in May 1883 and the following summer they were followed there by a number of the other Glasgow Boys, including Crawhall and Melville. They sketched the village and surrounding countryside in the open air, and they attempted to form an artist’s colony at Cockburnspath, much like their French compatriots had established at Barbizon and Grez-sur-Loing. Most of the Glasgow Boys resided here for short spells between 1883 and 1886. During the summer months it was customary to see artists dotted all around the village, with their easels pitched up underneath large umbrellas.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Edward Arthur Walton (1860 - 1922) Scottish
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title:Sketches of Sheep at Cockburnspath
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date created:Unknown
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materials:Pencil on paper
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measurements:23.70 x 14.80 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Sir James Lewis Caw Gift 1950
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accession number:D 4464
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gallery:
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subject:
Edward Arthur Walton
Edward Arthur Walton
Walton and his artist friends formed a group known as the Glasgow Boys. They were inspired by developments in landscape painting in France and sought to explore the natural effects of light in the open air through painting Scottish rural subjects. Walton spent a year in Dusseldorf and studied at...