Medium
oil on canvas
Measurements
91.0 × 61.2 cm
Credit Line
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Gift of Mrs Emma a'Beckett, 1893
Gallery location
Not on display
About this work
In 1890 Emma Minnie Boyd and her husband Arthur Merric Boyd moved to England. Here, she found a new, striking subject for her painting To the workhouse, having been best known for her interiors depicting women at leisure. In this painting – which was exhibited at the Royal Academy in London the following year – Boyd depicts an elderly couple, finally defeated by poverty, trudging along a snow-covered street toward the workhouse. Dickensian social-realist themes had been popular with European and English artists throughout the mid nineteenth centruy, but the subject still had resonance into the 1890s when this work was completed.
Place/s of Execution
London, England
Inscription
inscribed in grey paint u.l.: E. M. Boyd / 91.
Accession Number
p.399.4-1
Department
Australian Painting
This digital record has been made available on NGV Collection Online through the generous support of The Vizard Foundation
Subjects (general)
Emotions and Mental States Human Figures
Subjects (specific)
elderly melancholy poor (people) snow (precipitation) spouses workhouses (institutions)
Frame
Original, by Gill’s Fine Art Gallery, Melbourne