Main content

The Dali Christ

4 Extra Debut. Dali's Christ, housed in a Glasgow museum, was voted Scotland's favourite painting. Louise Welsh asks why? From June 2011.

1/1
In 2005 Dali's Christ of St John of the Cross was voted Scotland's favourite painting in the Herald newspaper, but it's had a torrid relationship with its home city of Glasgow over its 50 year existence. It was bought for the then earth-shattering price of Β£8,200 by Dr Tom Honeyman, the head of the city's art galleries in 1952. But Honeyman was no ordinary curator and the Dali was no ordinary painting. From the start there was uproar: art students, religious bigots, critics, stingy rate-payers were all appalled that Honeyman had spent so much money and bought this atypical Dali with its mesmerising stigmata-less, floating crucifixion. But Honeyman put them at defiance: not for him the baggage of an elitist arts background, he had trained and practised as a Glasgow doctor among the poor of the city. He saw himself as a showman, whose job was to show pictures and to pull the people in. He recognised from the first the unique pulling power of this extraordinary painting which has stormed the hearts of Glaswegians. The painting can't be so much as moved within the gallery without exciting comment and opinion from the public to whom it is THEIR painting - how dare some curator move it! How to explain such an extraordinary outpouring of feeling about a single work of art? Crime writer Louise Welsh gets on the case to examine the remarkable love/hate affair between Glasgow and the Dali.

Available now

28 minutes

Last on

Fri 7 Oct 2016 01:30

Credits

Role Contributor
Producer David Stenhouse
Presenter Louise Welsh

Broadcasts

  • Tue 28 Jun 2011 11:30
  • Wed 20 Jul 2011 14:05
  • Sun 24 Jul 2011 00:02
  • Sun 24 Jul 2011 06:03
  • Tue 27 Dec 2011 06:03
  • Mon 4 Jun 2012 05:30
  • Thu 6 Oct 2016 06:30
  • Thu 6 Oct 2016 13:30
  • Thu 6 Oct 2016 20:30
  • Fri 7 Oct 2016 01:30