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I. K. Brunel

© Bryan Organ & the Redfern Gallery, London. Image credit: The Brunel Museum

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The painting is after Robert Howlett’s iconic photograph of the engineer standing in front of the chains of the 'Great Eastern' at the ship’s launch ramps on the Isle of Dogs. Brunel collapsed and died soon after the photograph was taken. The Bryan Organ painting is larger than life and was commissioned by Sir Peter Parker, last Chairman of British Railways. The artist has replaced the chains with the portal of the railway tunnel at Box, and the picture originally hung in the Brunel Room at the Great Western Royal Hotel, Paddington. No longer manacled, the engineer stands at a doorway through which the sun shines on his birthday, if the stories are true. The Victorians' favourite word for machines was ‘promethean’. The engineer is a romantic figure, like the Titan who stole fire from Zeus and gave it to mortals.

The Brunel Museum

London

Title

I. K. Brunel

Date

1978

Medium

acrylic on canvas

Measurements

H 242.6 x W 119.4 cm

Accession number

LDBRU:2010.1

Acquisition method

gift from the British Rail Residuary Body, 2010

Work type

Painting

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The Brunel Museum

Railway Avenue, London, Greater London SE16 4LF England

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