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224

172 JAMES HUMBERT CRAIG RHA RUA (1877-1944)

Gossiping in the Barn

Oil on board, 24.5 x 35cm (9¾ x 13¾’’)

Signed

Born in Belfast, Craig spent his early years in Ballyholme, Co. Down, where he was privately educated. Craig derived little satisfaction

from working in the family tea business but it enabled him to travel and paint, particularly in Switzerland and the south of France. In

time, he turned a more serious eye to art as a profession, specifically to landscape painting. Apart from attending the Belfast College

of Art for less than a term, Craig was self-taught. He was influenced in his early work by Paul Henry but as his career developed

this became less apparent. He first exhibited at the RHA in 1915 at the relatively late age of thirty-seven when he showed a pair of

coastal scenes near his home at Ballywater, and he continued exhibiting there regularly.

In 1928 he was elected to the RHA. A member of the Belfast Art Society from 1920, he was one of the first RUAs when the society

was formed in 1930. He exhibited regularly with the Fine Art Society, London, over 200 works. Throughout the interwar period he

continued to exhibit in Belfast and Dublin and also in London. His work was included in the prestigious Exhibition of Irish Art in

Brussels in 1930 and in the Olympic Art Exhibition in Los Angeles in 1932. Though he went on sketching tours of Connemara and

Donegal Craig found so much stimulus in the scenery of the Glens of Antrim that he acquired a cottage at Cushendun and his work

became closely identified with the Middle Glens thereafter.

Craig had a significant following among younger artists and although he and his followers ignored European Modernism, they were

perfectly in tune with the romantic attitudes prevalent in Ireland during the period. Craig, together with Paul Henry, Frank McKelvey,

Charles Lamb and Maurice MacGonigal, comes closest to personifying a distinctive Irish School of Painting.

€ 1,200 - 1,600