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Going to the Match is a painting by British painter L. S. Lowry from 1953, depicting football fans and Burnden Park, the then home of Bolton Wanderers Football Club. Lowry had previously painted a different Going to the Match in 1928, which depicted fans outside a rugby ground, however, the 1953 painting has gained more fame over the years and become synonymous with the phrase "going to the match." The 1953 picture sold at auction for £7.8 million in 2022, whereas the 1928 painting was valued at between £2 and £3 million in 2021.

Description

Going to the Match (1928)

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L. S. Lowry's 1928 painting Going to the Match (oil on canvas, 42.5 × 53.3cm)Шаблон:Sfn depicts a crowd of rugby league fans walking left to right across the canvas to a rugby match. The goal posts of the rugby pitch can be seen in the background to the left, and behind the crowd are industrial buildings, a smoking factory chimney and a church. It is one of Lowry's earliest depictions of sporting events and representative of Lowry's understanding of the importance of rugby league to the communities of Northern England. It is also one of only two known depictions of rugby supporters by Lowry, the other, Coming from the Match, was painted in 1959.[1][2]

The closest rugby league teams to Lowry's home in Pendlebury was the Swinton Lions; it is thought that the blue and red scarves worn by different people in the crowd and the red flag flying by the rugby ground indicate that this was a match played by Swinton against the Salford Red Devils. The 1928 painting was displayed in the UK for the first time since 1966, at a 2012 exhibition in The Lowry, before being auctioned at Sotheby's. It is now in a private collection.[1][2][3]

Going to the Match (1946)

Another work by Lowry, Going to the Match (oil on panel 28 x 49.5 cm), dates from 1946. This work is in a private collection and was on long-term loan to The Lowry from 2012 to 2022.[4]

Going to the Match (1953)

Going to the Match (1953) depicts a large crowd of football supporters flocking towards the Burnden Park football stadium in Burnden, Bolton, in Lancashire (today within Greater Manchester), the home of Bolton Wanderers F.C. until 1999.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11] Within the stadium, crowds already fill the stands in anticipation of a football match. In the distance can be seen rows of terraced houses and smoking factory chimneys.[12]

The painting originally bore the title The Football Match before it was renamed. While the distant industrial buildings in this painting are an invented, generic scene (comparable with Lowry's many other Industrial Landscape paintings), the football ground is identifiably Burnden Park. Lowry was a football fan who supported Manchester City F.C., and he lived in Pendlebury, just Шаблон:Convert miles from the Bolton Wanderers ground. Lowry appreciated football as a significant aspect of working men's culture in the North of England.[12]

Lowry acknowledged that the 16th-century Netherlandish master Pieter Bruegel the Elder had influenced his work, and Lowry's distant, elevated viewpoint evident in this painting has been compared to Bruegel's Procession to Calvary (1564). The painting has been acclaimed as a "Brueghel-like vision of a vanished England" as it "documents an industrial milieu that has all but disappeared", depicting "a moment of colour and joy in the lives of hard-pressed workers".[13]

History

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Going To The Match (1953) was first exhibited at the Lefevre Gallery in October 1953, where it received critical acclaim. In June 1959, the painting was included in a Lowry retrospective exhibition at Manchester City Art Gallery, where critics praised the artist's representation of moving crowds. Writing in The Manchester Guardian, Eric Newton described how "two streams of spectators cross each other diagonally as though they had been drilled by a mater of choreography", while a critic in The Times critic described the figures in the crowds as "almost like comic insects each advancing through different streams [...] most beautifully blended into a single, ever-moving pattern". Шаблон:Sfn

In 1999 Going to the Match (1953) was sold at auction at Sotheby's for a record £1,926,500, the highest auction price ever fetched by a modern British artwork at the time. It was bought by the Professional Footballers' Association (PFA), whose chief executive Gordon Taylor has once played for Bolton Wanderers at Burnden Park. Taylor stated, "We were determined to buy it for football because it is quite simply the finest football painting ever." The painting was loaned to Salford Museum and Art Gallery and later moved to public display at The Lowry arts centre in Salford.[6]Шаблон:Sfn[14]

In 2022 Going to the Match (1953) was purchased by The Lowry at auction, at Christie's in London, for £7.8 million with financial support from the Law Family charitable foundation. The 1928 painting was valued at between £2 and £3 million in 2021.[6][15][16]

Going to the Match (1953) featured in a retrospective exhibition at Tate Britain in 2013.[13][17] In 2024 the painting will be shown in a touring exhibition which includes Gallery Oldham, the Grundy Art Gallery in Blackpool, the Williamson Art Gallery and Museum in Birkenhead, the National Football Museum in Manchester and Bury Art Museum.[18]

References

Citations

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Sources

See also

External links

Шаблон:L. S. Lowry Шаблон:Bolton Wanderers F.C.