~ Sidney Goodwin 1867 1944 Unloading The Cargo At Dusk Watercolour ~
An emotive and quality example of Goodwin’s work, depicting a busy scene of a schooner brig cargo ship being unloaded under dusk with a rain storm coming in.
The painting is signed boldly in red to the lower right.
The watercolour is presented in a double mounted glazed frame. It is ready for hanging and has some of the artists details to the reverse.
~ Sidney Goodwin ~
Paul Sidney Goodwin (1875–1944), commonly known as Sidney Goodwin, was an English/Australian artist who painted primarily in watercolour. When he emigrated to Australia he adopted the pseudonym William Young.
Goodwin was born in Southampton, England on 28 January 1875. He was the elder son of the six children born to William Sidney Goodwin and his wife Elizabeth (nee Young). His talented family produced several artists, most notably Sidney’s uncle Albert Goodwin.
Typically, Goodwin painted urban, rural and maritime landscapes and he was known as an accomplished painter of animals, particularly horses. Like his father and uncle before him, he was an avid traveller and made regular overseas trips which included extended visits to Canada and Ireland. Despite travelling for long periods each year he was nonetheless a regular exhibitor with the Southampton Art Society (SAS), Bournemouth Art Society and Royal Hibernian Academy of Arts in Dublin. He commenced exhibiting with the SAS’s Fourth Annual Exhibition in 1889 when only fourteen years old.
After WWI Goodwin departed the northern hemisphere emigrating to Australia where he stayed for the remainder of his life. On arrival in Sydney he adopted the pseudonym William Young and his Australian paintings, which date from 1919, were signed “W. Young”. It is unclear what circumstances prompted his relocation and change of name.
He died in Sydney on 23 September 1944 and is represented in the collections of the Southampton City Art Gallery, Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, Wollongong Art Gallery and New England Regional Art Museum.
~ Condition ~
There are several foxing spots, most noticeable on the upper sky. Otherwise the watercolour is excellent and presents well.
~ Dimensions ~
The frame measures 78 cm (22 inches) wide and 54 cm (21 inches) tall.
The actual exposed watercolour measures 50 cm (19.5 inches) wide and 30 cm (12 inches) tall.
It weighs 3.2 Kg.
#10142