Robert Colquhoun

The Dubliners

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About this artwork

In 1946 Robert Colquhoun travelled to County Cork in Ireland with his long-term partner, Robert MacBryde. The pair spent several weeks staying with the painter Patrick Hennessy, whom they had first met on their post-diploma studies at Hospitalfield House, near Arbroath. Colquhoun was impressed by the working women he saw there and produced several paintings of ‘shawlies’ – the poor women who wore shawls over their heads. However, the two figures portrayed here bear a striking resemblance to Colquhoun and MacBryde. The Dubliners was included in Colquhoun’s solo show at the Lefevre Gallery in October 1947, priced at £70 – double the price charged for similarly-sized works just three years earlier, and an indication of his rising status in the art world.

Updated before 2020

see media
  • artist:
    Robert Colquhoun (1914 - 1962) Scottish
  • title:
    The Dubliners
  • date created:
    1946
  • materials:
    Oil on canvas
  • measurements:
    76.20 x 61.00 cm; Framed: 94.50 x 79.00 x 8.00 cm
  • object type:
  • credit line:
    Purchased (Knapping Fund) 1963
  • accession number:
    GMA 842
  • gallery:
  • artwork photographed by:
    Antonia Reeve
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Robert Colquhoun

Robert Colquhoun