Item DC 102/1/104 - Designs for window and four roundels, Transport Museum

Key Information

Reference code

DC 102/1/104

Title

Designs for window and four roundels, Transport Museum

Date(s)

  • c1960-1980 (Creation)

Level of description

Item

Extent

1 item

Content and Structure

Scope and content

Full-colour development drawings and notes for a commission for the Transport Museum. On the left side of the page is an arched window with diamond leading and a roundel design of an abstracted ship. In the centre of the page are four roundel designs; the top left is a larger version of the one featured on the window, the top right and bottom left designs feature mechanical motifs, and the bottom right design is of a ship shown in profile and labelled 'COMET 1812'. On the right side of the page are three full-colour nautical signal flags labelled 'PYU - Good Voyage', a bell with rope pull and a close-up drawing of a rope unravelling. In the bottom left corner of the page is a sketch of a rectangle with diagonal lines along the bottom and four indistinct shapes above them. Annotations relating to measurements at the top and bottom of the page. Annotation below the four roundel designs reads 'Mural of Comet - Transport Museum - Albert Drive'.

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General Information

Name of creator

(1924-1982)

Biographical history

Alfredo Avella, DA AMGP, was born in Cava de Tirreni in Italy in 1924. He studied part time under Hugh Adam Crawford at Glasgow School of Art, attending evening classes between 1946-1948 and the early 1950s. Avella was encouraged by John Duncan Ferguson and exhibited as an independent with the New Scottish Group at McLellan Galleries in 1956. Two early paintings from the period are on permanent view at The Ferguson Gallery in Perth. He studied Stained Glass at the Glasgow School of Art, graduating in 1965. He was made an associate of British Society of Master Glass Painters in 1966. He became a visiting member of staff at Glasgow School of Art in 1968 and was a full time lecturer in the Stained Glass and Murals department between 1969 and 1982.

Continuing to be a painter and stained glass artist in Scotland, Avella was awarded a Scottish Arts Council Visual Art residency in Amsterdam in 1980. He had many one man shows and group exhibitions in Scotland, including; Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh and The Talbot Rice Gallery, University of Edinburgh in 1980. He undertook many commissions in stained glass in Scotland including; Drumchapel St Andrews Church, Glasgow, McTaggart Memorial Westpark Church, Denny, Denny Civic Hall, Craiglockhart Parish Church, Edinburgh, St John the Baptist Church, Port Glasgow, St Mark’s Church, Oxgangs, Edinburgh, Joy of Life, Queen Margaret's College, Edinburgh College of Domestic Science, Musselburgh, Glasgow Police Federation in Woodside Place, Glasgow. He also undertook commissions in metal and mosaic, such as at the Motherwell and Wishaw Civic Centre and the County District Library in Dunbarton. There are a number of his paintings in private collections. Avella died in Glasgow in 1982.

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Physical Description

Pencil, ink and watercolour on paper.
Dimensions: 450 x 638 mm
The top corners of the page have narrow tears as if they were pulled off a surface that they were pinned to.

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Catalogued by Eláir Ní Thuama, Work Placement Student, Jan-Apr 2024

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