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Life of McBrian a Portrait of a Glasgow boy by Scottish artist John McDonald after Jez Coulson's Easterhouse Crucifixion Print

John McDonald

United Kingdom

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About The Artwork

Life Of McBrian A Portrait of a Glasgow Boy Based on Jez Coulson’s Easterhouse Crucifixion 1987 Life of McBrian depicts a small boy in the Easterhouse district of Glasgow. At the time of painting the artist believed him to have been photographed by an amateur photographer in the late 1970s, as this was how it was archived by Glasgow Police for an exhibition. However since the image was used as the cover for Booker Prize Winning Shugie Bain, by Douglas Stuart, he has learned that the image was created by Photo-Journalist Jez Coulson, who now lives in the United States. It is known as The Easterhouse Crucifixion, and Jez Coulson has kindly given retrospective permission for the creation of John’s painting. A familiar sight to the artist, who grew up in Drumchapel, the boy is pictured on top of a tenement washing pole, and the image calls to mind both the nostalgia of a bygone era, and the stark reality of urban poverty in Glasgow. The figure of a child from the past represents 'Yesterday's Tomorrow' and is about the hopes and dreams we all have, as well as the freedom of childhood imagination. The original photograph shows a rubble and litter-strewn ground that is a harsh landscape for a child to make his playground. However John has portrayed the ground, right up to the tenement railings, as a beautiful meadow. The painting is mainly in black and white, but in the right foreground is a burst of vibrant colour, as the flowers are painted in lush primary tones of red, yellow and blue. It reminds us that where there is Life there is Hope. Visually it also calls to mind the colour of the flicker of flame if you burn a black and white photograph. But the emergence of colour in the painting is like a 'burning' that is creative rather than destructive, as though nature, life and vibrancy are allowed to burn through the surface of drab reality.

Details & Dimensions

Print:Giclee on Fine Art Paper

Size:8 W x 10 H x 0.1 D in

Size with Frame:13.25 W x 15.25 H x 1.2 D in

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Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Born in a Glasgow tenement in a sectarian district, I left school with a piece of paper (no certificates) saying that I was deaf and would be best employed in a noisy environment as everyone would be similarly disadvantaged. Born under the image of Christ of St John of the Cross by Salvador Dali. This huge painting in Kelvingrove art gallery seems to have an impact on me becoming an Artist in my 50s. Can I say that I spent years of my childhood evading gallery custodians and sliding along the polished floor under this painting? Unknown to me at the time, this painting by Dali, with its dynamic perspective and monumental scale, planted the seed for a love of art, and awakened the soul of this deaf kid from Drumchapel. When I first picked up a piece of charcoal as an adult and started to draw, it was a version of Dali's Christ of St John of the Cross which I created. Following a decade working in noisy environments, my real education began: in a Merseyside Unemployed Resource Centre. Training to become a Welfare Rights Officer I became hungry for education. In becoming mentally astute in the law, politics, and history that inform welfare and union work, I found, with naivety, myself. My fine art practice is informed by the dual and equal passions of my life: a passion for creative arts, and passionate campaigning for social justice. I have always been involved in the arts, through theatre, film, directing, and spoken word performance. For a long time I needed to shout, and I used performance to shout publically, about abuses and inequality I witnessed in mainstream services, to shout out for social justice, and educate on behalf of silent minorities. I am profoundly deaf and found that being involved in the arts was a way of being included. I started painting about 6 years ago on an old van that had been converted as a camper, just a plain white van that became a giant 3D canvas. I was conscious of passers by either watching or commenting, both were a challenge because of deafness but it was this situation that allowed me to be more included in my community and society in general. People liked my work and over a period of years as the van canvas was filled so was I, with confidence and more involvement with passers by, some who became friends. My painting is both the catalyst and the fruition of a personal journey towards peace.

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