George Mackay Brown Portraits - 2017
Date: 13 September 2017
Time: 13:00
Four portraits of George Mackay Brown by photographer Gordon Wright were gifted to the library and supplement the paintings displayed at the Warehouse Buildings, Stromness.
George by Ian MacInnes. Ian MacInnes painted this portrait of George Brown, his classmate at Stromness Academy from day one onwards, and life-long friend, in a rare afternoon off school in the early 1950s. At the time, the family was living in rented accommodation in “Quildon”, where Ian used an empty, rather draughty upstairs room as a studio. This is why George is wearing the old raincoat and famous Fair Isle scarf, which made him a familiar figure to Stromnessians of the era, as he wended his way north to the pier-head and back home to what was then Well Park. An avid supporter of Orkney County football, George would accompany the team on its sporting encounters in Shetland and Caithness. On one of these escapades, the scarf was mysteriously lost in Shetland, only to reappear flying from the mast of the old Ola on a trip back from Thurso!
“As like him as life”, folk said of this portrait of George, aged about 30. It was used as the original cover of his autobiography, ‘For the Islands I Sing’. It is painted on board, in its original frame (Ian often reused old frames and touched them up himself) and is as he intended it to be.
Stromness, its history, people and, not least, the old library meant so much to both George and Ian that the new premises are the right and appropriate place for this painting to hang.
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