Trawler and Pier
Alfred Wallis 8/8/1855 - 29/8/1942
Summary
A ship is in the centre middle ground, headed right. There is a funnel at the rear of the boat. It is surrounded by turbulent grey seas and in the top right corner there is a lighthouse on an outcrop of rock.
Display Label
Gallery text panel Tradition and Experiment Early Twentieth-Century Art 1900 - 1939. In Britain, the beginning of the 20th century coincided with the end of the Victorian age. Artists and designers experimented, challenging traditional ways of seeing and making; now trying to create a new art for a modern era. In painting, it was often traditional subject matter such as portraits, landscapes and interiors that would be tackled in new ways. The bustle and the brutality of urban life was an inspiration or something to escape from. Boundaries became increasingly blurred between design and decoration, painting and making and individual expression replaced academic authority. Art was made to be affordable and at a scale that would fit into ordinary homes. Some called the celebration of the modern into question after the horrors of the First World War. Traditional imagery was simplified or became childlike and slowly broke down into fragmented visions. Dream and chance tapped into subconscious anxieties and in 1939, world war intervened once again.
Object Name
Trawler and Pier
Creators Name
Dimensions
Card: 22.2cm x 32.5cm
accession number
1995.44
Place of creation
England
Support
Card
Medium
Oil Paint
Legal
© Manchester Art Gallery