The Great Eight at Broughton House
This impressive museum, combining both original interiors and exhibition spaces, is dedicated to Hornel’s life and work as an artist, collector and antiquarian. Bought by Hornel in 1901, Broughton House sits in a beautiful garden with a colourful blend of Eastern and Western horticulture.
Here are a few of my favourite things!
The Erard baby grand piano
This was purchased in the same year that Hornel’s great Gallery was built on the side of the house. The piano was bought for a purpose: to impress guests, and it looks wonderful within the space it sits. It’s a very good quality piano and it’s still a working one, used for concerts that are held here. It’s been heavily restored following a fire back in the early ’90s, but it still sounds wonderful. We were very lucky. Everybody in the high street turned out to remove objects from the house and get them to safety while the fire was going. Not a single object was lost. That’s testament to how strongly the community think about Broughton.
The Dalshangan Cross
This was originally a grave-marker for a great chief and later used as a waymarker on the pilgrim’s road. Dalshangan is near the St John’s Town of Dalry. Hornel would often rove the countryside and bring things back to display in either his garden or his house. This was one of his finds. We’re not too far from Whithorn, which has this very strong history of pilgrimage and a place in early Christianity. Also, the Covenanters were very active around here. The link between the Church and this area is very strong.
Bessie MacNicol’s portrait of Hornel
I think the world of Bessie MacNicol. She was a very brave woman trying to make her mark in a world that would not accept women painters. She was very influenced by the work of the Glasgow Boys, particularly by Hornel, and we have a series of letters that show that her feelings were quite warm towards him. Hornel wasn’t a great supporter of women’s rights, but he was supportive of artists who were starting out. He was encouraging and helpful; unfortunately, Bessie misread the situation and thought there was more to it than that. Sadly, this portrait did not receive a lot of positive criticism, largely because she was a woman. She died tragically young, at the age of 34. She didn’t get the credit that she deserved.
Hornel’s suitcase with travel stickers
Hornel was extremely well-travelled. He and artist George Henry (1858–1943) journeyed to Japan in 1893 and spent a year there soaking up the culture. It led to an extremely successful exhibition, which launched Hornel along his road to fame. However, there’s also a very sad element to this story for George Henry, who had worked equally hard on that trip, lost his entire body of work on the way back. We have an absolutely heart-breaking letter in our archives from Henry to Hornel saying, ‘I’ve lost everything, everything has been destroyed.’ The trip was more than just an artistic fad; Hornel loved the culture and was inspired by numerous aspects, not only in his work but also in his garden design and in the ‘curios’ he brought back with him. Japan informed his style and aesthetic for the rest of his career.
The stuffed goose
The stuffed goose is a bit of an anomaly in our collection and we don’t know too much about it! What we do know is that Hornel lent it to fellow ‘Glasgow Boy’ James Guthrie (1859–1930) for his painting To Pastures New, which is more famously known as The Goose Girl. It’s also quite likely that Hornel used it for a painting of his own, entitled The Goose Girl – that painting is in a private collection today. As I say, we’re not very sure about the full history of the goose, but we have these stories and it’s a hugely popular part of the collection.
Man in a Red Tunic, an early work by Hornel
This is a very early painting of Hornel’s – he actually painted it when he was just 21 years old. It’s a remarkable painting in a lot of ways. It is very well observed. It was one of his last pieces before he returned to Scotland from his studies in Antwerp to make a career from his art. He painted three versions of it in all. You can see one here in the collection, there’s one on display in Harrogate, and the third is in a private collection.
Mary Timney’s shawl and the court papers
Mary Timney was the last woman to be publicly hanged in Dumfries in 1862, for the murder of a neighbour. Hornel somehow managed to get hold of the shawl that was worn by Mary Timney. Bloodstained sections have been cut out of it, which were sent to Edinburgh for forensic examination during the court case. We have the full court records that go with that, and a photograph of the three children who were left when she died. It’s a chilling and tragic story, and an extraordinary item. Hornel was very concerned that the histories of people from the local area were recorded, not just the histories of the great and worthy, but of ordinary people as well.
Burns’s first edition
Burns’s political message was very appealing to ordinary people, and Hornel was a passionate Burnsian. We have the fourth-largest collection of Burns material anywhere in the world here at Broughton House. It covers a vast range of items: everything from our first edition of Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect and several other first editions, to scraps of poetry in Burns’s handwriting, interesting letters and invitations to various Burns Club suppers. Hornel was actually the president of the Dumfries Burns Club for a little while. Hornel’s sister Tizzy continued to add items to the Burns collection, even after he died.
See more original Robert Burns works at Robert Burns Birthplace Museum.
This story first appeared in The Scots Magazine.
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