About this artwork
Guthrie formed a lifelong friendship with Edward Arthur Walton and Joseph Crawhall. In 1879 they spent summer at Rosneath on the Clyde coast, and established a precedent for spending their summers out of the city sketching in the countryside. They chose to concentrate on depicting country lanes, field workers and cabbage patches in the corner of farms. The three artists’ close relationship is apparent in their letters to each other, which are illustrated with anecdotal tales and comical sketches. This little caricature is the result of a drawing game that they often played called “Heads, Bodies and Legs” where each artist would draw a segment of the body and then would turn over the sheet so that the next person could not see the design that had gone before.
Updated before 2020
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artists:Edward Arthur WaltonScottish (1860 - 1922) Sir James GuthrieScottish (1859 - 1930) Joseph CrawhallScottish (1861 - 1913)
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title:Games of Heads, Bodies and Legs
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date created:Unknown
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materials:Pencil on paper
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measurements:22.50 x 15.80 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Dr Camilla M. Uytman Gift 1981
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accession number:D 5102.45
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artwork photographed by:Antonia Reeve
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...