Stonehaven Harbour
About this artwork
Stonehaven, the county town of Kincardineshire, is a fishing port on the north-east coast of Scotland. During the 1870s the herring shoals attracted boats from the north-east and south-west of England, France and northern Europe. The completion of railway links between Edinburgh and Aberdeen in 1850 had accelerated the transformation of Stonehaven into a popular holiday resort and a place for painters and photographers, many drawn by its proximity to Dunnottar Castle. The elongated pillar format of this striking compositional design, with the flattened rectangles of the old houses and the russet sails of the ‘Fifies’ forming a pattern that climbs up the canvas surface, suggests that Fettes Douglas had been studying Japanese prints, especially those of Hiroshige.
Updated before 2020
-
artist:Sir William Fettes DouglasScottish (1822 - 1891)
-
title:Stonehaven Harbour
-
date created:1874
-
materials:Oil on canvas
-
measurements:119.40 x 58.80 cm; Framed: 150.50 x 90.30 x 8.50 cm
-
object type:
-
credit line:Purchased 1909
-
accession number:NG 981
-
gallery:
Sir William Fettes Douglas
Sir William Fettes Douglas
A self-taught painter, William Fettes Douglas worked as a bank clerk in Edinburgh for ten years. He was a keen antiquarian and collector, and his interests in those fields influenced his choice of subject matter which sometimes included alchemy, astrology and magic. Enormously learned, he was...