• Search Icon
  • Toggle Menu
  • Close Menu

The Art

Search for information about all the works of art and craft we have donated to museums

Star of Bethlehem (1978)

John Bellany

oil on hardboard

Tate, London, Liverpool and St Ives

Star of Bethlehem (1978)

Details

Classification:

Painting

Materials:

Oil, Hardboard

Physical Object Description:

Inscribed: ‘Bellany’ bottom left

Dimensions:

184.1 x 245.4 cm

Accession Number:

T02336

Credit:

Presented by the Contemporary Art Society to mark the opening of the Tate Gallery extension, 1979

Ownership history:

Purchased from the artist by Gabrielle Keiller (1908-1995) for the Contemporary Art Society, 30 May 1979; presented to the Tate Gallery, 1979
‘Star of Bethlehem’ was the name of an actual fishing boat based in Eyemouth, south-east of Edinburgh. Many boats had names with Christian connections as religion played a dominant part in the lives of fishermen and their families. ). According to Bellany there were twelve churches in Port Seton where he was born and brought up at nearby Port Seton. His father and grandfather had been fishermen at both Port Seton and Eyemouth and while still a schoolboy Bellany often worked at gutting fish.

Accounts of the Eyemouth Disaster of 1881 in which almost the whole male population of that village, 150 men, was wiped out in one great storm had a lifelong impact on the artist, who painted this picture (one of many with a similar theme) whilst a postgraduate student at the Royal College of Art (1965-68) after studying at Edinburgh College of Art (1960-65).

All rights reserved. Any further use will need to be cleared with the rights holder. Permission granted to reproduce for personal and educational use only. Commercial copying, hiring, lending is prohibited.

Read our copyright policy for more information.

Artworks by John Bellany

Browse more relevant artworks.

You Might Also Like