"Waulking the Cloth"

Dublin Core

Title

"Waulking the Cloth"

Subject

Art

Description

This local Lochaber scene depicts women waulking cloth on the shores of Loch Nan Uamh. Six women are seated in a rough circle wielding short mallets and evidently singing, while another group observe them. People waulked the cloth they had woven. This meant that they pulled or stretched the tartan into shape. During the waulking process, they sang Gaelic songs and recited poetry to keep themselves amused. The painting was created by Jemima Wedderburn Blackburn (1823 – 1909) a renowned Scottish artist who lived at Roshven. Although she received no formal training in art, she was a watercolourist of outstanding ability. She had connections with many of the Victorian artistic and intellectual élite and formed life-long friendships with Landseer, Millais and Ruskin, who described her as 'the best artist he knew'. This painting was purchased with the support of The National Fund for Acquisitions to commemorate the 80th anniversary of founding of the West Highland Museum.

Creator

Jemima Blackburn

Source

objects,art

Date

1870

Contributor

eulac3d

Type

Physical Object

Identifier

86

Date Modified

02/02/2021

Extent

W 740 mm x H 285 mm

Spatial Coverage

find,56.8442287,-5.7635009;

Europeana

Europeana Data Provider

West Highlands Museum

Europeana Type

TEXT

Physical Object Item Type Metadata

Prim Media

422

Material

watercolour

Object Number

3563

Citation

Jemima Blackburn, “"Waulking the Cloth",” West Highalnds Museum, accessed January 23, 2025, https://whm100.org/omeka/items/show/270.

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