Walter Rankin, fl. 1940. Local Defence Volunteer ('Home Guard')
About this artwork
The Home Guard, officially known as the Local Defence Volunteers (LDV) emerged during World War II. Those who were too old serve in the armed forces but wanted to contribute to the war effort were organised in volunteer groups. When the Scottish National Portrait Gallery acquired this portrait, the name of the sitter had been lost, but he was later identified as Walter Rankin, a retired newsagent of the Skelmorlie LDV unit. His good-humoured face and the everyday objects on the table form a poignant contrast to the military uniform and rifle propped against the table.
Updated before 2020
-
artist:Sir William Oliphant HutchisonScottish (1889 - 1970)
-
title:Walter Rankin, fl. 1940. Local Defence Volunteer ('Home Guard')
-
date created:1940
-
materials:Oil on canvas
-
measurements:76.00 x 55.60 cm; Framed: 101.00 x 80.50 x 6.00 cm
-
object type:
-
credit line:Purchased 1987
-
accession number:PG 2719
-
gallery:
-
depicted:
-
subject:
Sir William Oliphant Hutchison
Sir William Oliphant Hutchison
The son of a Kirkcaldy businessman, William Oliphant Hutchison studied at Edinburgh College of Art and in Paris. He was part of the group of young painters who exhibited as the Edinburgh Group immediately before and after the First World War. Surviving a severe war wound, from 1918 he lived in...