Dockers
Artist
Maurice MacGonigal
(1900 - 1979)
Datec. 1933-1934
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions125.4 x 100 cm
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineCollection & image © Hugh Lane Gallery.
Donated by the Thomas Haverty Trust, 1935.
© The Estate of Maurice MacGonigal.
Object number765
DescriptionDockers is a forthright statement in which MacGonigal, perhaps more well know for his West of Ireland landscapes, reveals his concern for the economically precarious position of the urban working classes. Set against the dramatic red of an ocean-going cargo ship, the three stevedores depicted here await the result of 'the read', that is a reading of the names of those who would be given work on that particular day. The three 'button-men' whose portraits are painted here, were sent by the artist's friend and Trades Union leader, James Larkin to MacGonigal's studio to pose for this painting. This deliberate posing in-doors may account for the painting's slight airless quality. The two men facing us had left their native Co. Clare in search of employment. Where the younger man stares unflinchingly at the viewer, his older companion to the left, though less confrontational, is in his detachment equally dignified. The man with his back to us, from Dublin, appears to be more resigned to the frustrations of this daily ritual. Elected a member of the RHA in 1933, and President of the RHA in 1962, MacGonigal also became Professor of Painting at the National College of Art in 1960. This is one of MacGonigal's most successful subject-pictures, although the composition is somewhat stiff and lacks the freedom of his landscapes the three dock workers depicted seem to be drawn from the context of a mass meeting, but one is never sure as to what is happening; perhaps the theme is definace in the face of adversity.
On View
Not on viewEvie Sydney Hone