User:GhostInTheMachine/Drafts/John Munnoch
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No relation
[edit]- John Minnoch redirect to Jon Brower Minnoch.
- Norman Munnoch — Scotland international rugby union player
Art UK listings
[edit]Art UK — hospitalfield munnoch
- Hospitalfield – John Munnoch (1879–1915)
- Castle Ruins (1906) – John Munnoch (1879–1915)
- Fishing Boat – John Munnoch (1879–1915) (attributed to)
- Peter Munnoch – John Munnoch (1879–1915)
- The Great Church at Veere, Netherlands – 1914 – John Munnoch (1879–1915)
- The Chinese Coat (1910–1914) – John Munnoch (1879–1915)
- The Yellow Sail (1914) – John Munnoch (1879–1915)
- Jessie MacGregor (1913) – John Munnoch (1879–1915)
- Castle Ruins (1906) – John Munnoch (1879–1915)
- Fishing Boat – John Munnoch (1879–1915) (attributed to)
- Hospitalfield – John Munnoch (1879–1915)
- On the Forth near Stirling (1900–1914) – John Munnoch (1879–1915)
- Mrs Anne Bruce – Peter Munnoch
- Stewart Clark – Peter Munnoch — Stewart Clark (after William Ewart Lockhart) – Peter Munnoch – Paisley Museum and Art Galleries
https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/search/venue:hospitalfield-5896 no Munnoch shown
{{Infobox artist}}
The Girl
[edit]https://www.stirling-lhs.org/uploads/5/0/2/4/5024620/the_girl_2.pdf
THE GIRL IN 'THE CHINESE COAT' – John Munnoch. 1879 – 1915
The painting is called ‘The Chinese Coat’ and is the work of a local man, John Munnoch, who was born in Stirling on 23rd September 1879. His father, Michael, a journeyman slater, was married twice, firstly (in 1858) to Catherine Sneddon, by whom he had four children – William, Robert (known as Bob), Michael, and James (known as Jim). Catherine died just five weeks after baby James’s birth, and Michael remarried in 1867. His bride this time was Helen Paterson and there were seven children of this marriage. The first child, born in 1868, was called John, but he was not the artist. That little boy died in 1875, and the first son born after his death was named after him. This was the artist. In between John the first and John the second came David, Margaret, Peter, and Helen (known as Nelly), with another son, Alexander, born in 1884. The family moved away from Stirling to the Bathgate/Broxburn sometime between 1884 and 1900. However, sometime around 1910/11 John was admitted to the Edinburgh School of Art, where he was a frequent prize-winner. This included travel scholarships, which may perhaps help to explain the Italian influence seen in some of his work. In 1914, John was on a sketching holiday in Holland with his friend Henry Taylor Wyse, a leading figure in the Scottish Arts and Crafts movement, when the First World War broke out. They returned to Scotland and early in 1915 John volunteered and found himself in the 5th Battalion (the Queen’s Edinburgh Rifles) of the Royal Scots. He left Scotland around the 9th of March, and by the end of June he was dead, killed at Gallipoli on 28th June, although the family were not informed for a further three months.
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Veere
[edit]https://www.smithartgalleryandmuseum.co.uk/veere-john-munnoch/
‘The Great Church at Veere, 1914’ by John Munnoch (1879 – 1915) is a recent purchase for the Stirling Smith collections, made possible by grants from the National Fund for Acquisitions and the Common Good Fund of Stirling. Scottish artists were well acquainted with Veere, as from 1541 it was the Scottish staple port for trade, and to this day, cultural ties remain with Scotland.
Munnoch was born in Port Street, Stirling and attended Craigs School and the High School of Stirling. He studied at Edinburgh College of Art where, in 1912, he gained the Carnegie Travelling Scholarship and the Maclaine Watters Medal. The following year he won the Keith Prize for the best student work exhibited that year at the RSA, and again the Maclaine Watters Medal.
Munnoch was one of the most talented artists of his generation. This was possibly one of the last works he painted before he enlisted for active service with 5th Battalion, Royal Scots and was killed at Gallipoli in June 1915. His name is on the Stirling War Memorial, and at this time of year we remember the massive loss of life, energy and artistic genius caused by the Great War.
Great Church, Great War, John Munnoch, The Great War, Veere, World War 1
Source
[edit]https://www.artbiogs.co.uk/1/artists/munnoch-john
- MUNNOCH John 1879-1915
- Painter born in Stirling, Scotland Munnoch studied at Edinburgh School of Art in c.1910-11.
- paywall
John Munnoch | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 28 June 1915 | (aged 36)
Nationality | British |
Education | |
Known for | Painting, drawing |
Family | brother Peter Munnoch |
John Munnoch (23 September 1879 – 28 June 1915) was a Scottish painter.
Early life
[edit]Born in Stirling on 23 September 1879.
Hospitalfield House in Arbroath, Scotland.
Death
[edit]When the first world war began, John was on a sketching holiday in the Netherlands. Shortly after his prompt return to Scotland, he joined the 5th Battalion of the Royal Scots in 1915. He served with his Battalion for only three months before being killed in action. [1] at Gallipoli on 28 June 1915.
Works
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]Further reading
[edit]External links
[edit]- Artworks by or after John Munnoch at the Art UK site