Hugh MacDiarmid (1892–1978)

© the artist's estate. Image credit: National Portrait Gallery, London

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A poet and critic, born Christopher Murray Grieve. A key figure of the twentieth-century Scottish Renaissance, he was the author of various collections of poems such as 'Sangschaw' in 1925 and 'A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle' in 1926, which employed Scots dialect as a modern literary language. He was a founder member of the Scottish National Party in 1928 and, at various times, a member of the Communist Party. Much of his poetry is profoundly nationalistic in tone and often written in dialect.

National Portrait Gallery, London

London

Title

Hugh MacDiarmid (1892–1978)

Date

1974

Medium

bronze

Measurements

H 33.7 x W (?) x D (?) cm

Accession number

5230

Acquisition method

purchased, 1978

Work type

Bust

Inscription description

incised and dated

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National Portrait Gallery, London

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