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Commissioned by John Baker & Co., the painting shows women making 4.5-inch shells at the Kilnhurst Steel Works in Rotherham, England during the First World War. As men left for military service, women entered heavy industry in unprecedented numbers, and British artist Stanhope Alexander Forbes records that shift with unusual seriousness. This is not a symbolic allegory of labor, but a hard, dangerous workplace of heat, weight, and precision. 

Inside a dark steelworks, a group of adult women labors around a blazing industrial process. The space is crowded with soot-black beams, shadowed platforms, and a steep stair rising at left. At the center, the furnace and freshly heated metal cast orange light across the workers’ faces, aprons, sleeves, and skirts. Several women bend, lift, guide, or brace themselves around a long glowing form being moved toward a steam hydraulic press. Their bodies are strong, coordinated, and alert rather than ornamental with sleeves rolled, posture forward, and attention fixed on timing and heat. Some wear caps or scarves. Others have their hair pulled back. The light catches flushed skin, pale cuffs, and the hot shine of metal against the near-black interior, making the women’s teamwork the real center of the picture. In the foreground, two women lean over a pile of hollow metal shell casings, creating an intimate counterpoint to the larger machinery and busier industrial floor behind them.

Munition workers were often nicknamed “canaries” because chemical exposure could yellow the skin and hair, a reminder that patriotic labor also carried bodily risk. By 1918, Forbes was an established painter associated with the Newlyn School, and the work feels both documentary and humane. Rather than isolate a single heroine, he presents a collective portrait of women whose skill kept wartime production moving. The painting honors endurance and mutual reliance while making visible a history of women’s labor that was essential and too often temporary.

Commissioned by John Baker & Co., the painting shows women making 4.5-inch shells at the Kilnhurst Steel Works in Rotherham, England during the First World War. As men left for military service, women entered heavy industry in unprecedented numbers, and British artist Stanhope Alexander Forbes records that shift with unusual seriousness. This is not a symbolic allegory of labor, but a hard, dangerous workplace of heat, weight, and precision. Inside a dark steelworks, a group of adult women labors around a blazing industrial process. The space is crowded with soot-black beams, shadowed platforms, and a steep stair rising at left. At the center, the furnace and freshly heated metal cast orange light across the workers’ faces, aprons, sleeves, and skirts. Several women bend, lift, guide, or brace themselves around a long glowing form being moved toward a steam hydraulic press. Their bodies are strong, coordinated, and alert rather than ornamental with sleeves rolled, posture forward, and attention fixed on timing and heat. Some wear caps or scarves. Others have their hair pulled back. The light catches flushed skin, pale cuffs, and the hot shine of metal against the near-black interior, making the women’s teamwork the real center of the picture. In the foreground, two women lean over a pile of hollow metal shell casings, creating an intimate counterpoint to the larger machinery and busier industrial floor behind them. Munition workers were often nicknamed “canaries” because chemical exposure could yellow the skin and hair, a reminder that patriotic labor also carried bodily risk. By 1918, Forbes was an established painter associated with the Newlyn School, and the work feels both documentary and humane. Rather than isolate a single heroine, he presents a collective portrait of women whose skill kept wartime production moving. The painting honors endurance and mutual reliance while making visible a history of women’s labor that was essential and too often temporary.

“The Munition Girls” by Stanhope Alexander Forbes (British) - Oil on canvas / 1918 - Science Museum (London) #WomenInArt #StanhopeAlexanderForbes #ScienceMuseumLondon #art #artText #BlueskyArt #IndustrialArt #WWIart #BritishArtist #ArtUK #WomenAtWork #CornishArt #BritishArt #1910sArt #NewlynSchool

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The Young Apprentice,
Newlyn Copperworks - 1908
Stanhope Alexander Forbes

John Drew MacKenzie, instigator of the Newlyn Industrial Class, instructing Johnny Payne Cotton (who produced Newlyn Copper until the 1950s).

@penleehousegallery.bsky.social
Penzance, Cornwall

#Art #NewlynSchool

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Forbes was a leading member of the group of artists who worked at Newlyn in Cornwall at the end of the 19th century. They were known as the "Newlyn School." The group painted local outdoor subjects full of light and atmosphere using characteristic free brushwork. The male artists in Newlyn painted the working life of the fishing village whereas Forbes depicted the women and children either home or engaged in more leisurely outdoor pursuits, as in this painting.

Forbes was a leading member of the group of artists who worked at Newlyn in Cornwall at the end of the 19th century. They were known as the "Newlyn School." The group painted local outdoor subjects full of light and atmosphere using characteristic free brushwork. The male artists in Newlyn painted the working life of the fishing village whereas Forbes depicted the women and children either home or engaged in more leisurely outdoor pursuits, as in this painting.

Blackberry Gathering by Elizabeth Forbes, c. 1912, Walker Art Gallery (Liverpool, UK)

#ArtHistory #ModernArt #Impressionism #NewlynSchool

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Albert Chevallier Taylor (1862-1925) Artista inglés que se especializó en retrato y pintura de género, pero también estuvo involucrado en los métodos plein air de la Newlyn School. 
“El Támesis en Benson, Oxfordshire” 1912 óleo sobre lienzo 129 x 155 cm Galería de Arte Alfred East, Kettering, Northamptonshire (Inglaterra)

Albert Chevallier Taylor (1862-1925) Artista inglés que se especializó en retrato y pintura de género, pero también estuvo involucrado en los métodos plein air de la Newlyn School. “El Támesis en Benson, Oxfordshire” 1912 óleo sobre lienzo 129 x 155 cm Galería de Arte Alfred East, Kettering, Northamptonshire (Inglaterra)

Albert #ChevallierTaylor (1862-1925) #inglés que se especializó en retrato y #pintura de género, pero también estuvo involucrado en métodos plein air de la #NewlynSchool
El #Támesis en Benson #Oxfordshire 1912 Galería de #ArteAlfredEast #Kettering, #Northamptonshire #Inglaterra #museoparticular

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Fishing boats tied up together in harbour, with the buildings rising behind from the quayside.

Fishing boats tied up together in harbour, with the buildings rising behind from the quayside.

“French Crabbers”
Harold Harvey (1930)

The boats were probably from the port of Douarnenez, near Brest, in Brittany, #France

@penleehousegallery.bsky.social
#Penzance #Cornwall

#NewlynSchool #HaroldHarvey

For @horatioforever.bsky.social

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Museum information-
“The artist became particularly well-known for dramatic coastal scenes, in which he focussed on the sculptural quality of the huge granite blocks that formed the cliffs and set them against a sparkling sea.”

Museum information- “The artist became particularly well-known for dramatic coastal scenes, in which he focussed on the sculptural quality of the huge granite blocks that formed the cliffs and set them against a sparkling sea.”

“The Cliffs near Land's End”
Robert Morson Hughes (1873 - 1953)

I love the dramatic scene. The stark, sculptural cliffs & the breaking waves of the sea.

Owned by Newlyn Art Gallery, Cornwall
Seen at @penleehousegallery.bsky.social

#Art #NewlynSchool

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The Vale of Trevider, 1899

The Vale of Trevider, 1899

The Lamorna Stream, c.1930

The Lamorna Stream, c.1930

Lamorna Woods aka Through Copse Clad Valley, 1903

Lamorna Woods aka Through Copse Clad Valley, 1903

Three paintings from the exhibition Lamorna Birch: A Painter Laureate at Penlee House Gallery & Museum, Penzance #LamornaBirch #NewlynSchool #Penzance #Cornwall

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St Neot preaching to crows who are raiding his villagers’ corn

St Neot preaching to crows who are raiding his villagers’ corn

St Kevin, in whose hands birds built their nests while he prayed

St Kevin, in whose hands birds built their nests while he prayed

St Mawes, who used a ram to carry his breviary (book of prayers, hymns, psalms & readings)

St Mawes, who used a ram to carry his breviary (book of prayers, hymns, psalms & readings)

Ernest Procter's panels depicting Celtic saints, on the pulpit at St Hilary's church in the village of St Hilary, near Penzance, Cornwall #ErnestProcter #NewlynSchool #Cornwall

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Work of the Week! 🖼️
St. Just Tin Miners, 1935
Harold Harvey (1874 - 1941)

#Cornwall #Newlyn #NewlynSchool #art #artist #arthistory #Museum

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Maya is holding a flip chart paper with the young people's suggestions to the prompt 'one thing I'd like to remember (from the whole week)'.

Maya is holding a flip chart paper with the young people's suggestions to the prompt 'one thing I'd like to remember (from the whole week)'.

The Year 5s at Newlyn School displayed brilliant teamwork and leadership skills in the Step Up programme Maya and Becky ran. 😎🤩

The young people's enthusiasm was contagious. Well done, everybody! 🥳

#teamworkmakesthedreamwork #leadershipdevelopment #stepup #newlynschool #restorativepractice

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"Two fishermen in a small rowing boat, coming back into harbour at Newlyn, in Cornwall, with their catch. Younger man stands in the stern of the boat sculling with a large oar, older bearded man in bow of boat dragging in the fishing line, catch visible in basket in bottom of boat. Port of Newlyn in background, lighthouse to left, moored boats inside harbour, beach and hills in background."

Description from the Manchester Art Gallery website.

"Two fishermen in a small rowing boat, coming back into harbour at Newlyn, in Cornwall, with their catch. Younger man stands in the stern of the boat sculling with a large oar, older bearded man in bow of boat dragging in the fishing line, catch visible in basket in bottom of boat. Port of Newlyn in background, lighthouse to left, moored boats inside harbour, beach and hills in background." Description from the Manchester Art Gallery website.

#LighthouseArt of the Day

Stanhope Alexander Forbes (Irish, 1857-1947), "The #Lighthouse (Newlyn, Cornwall)," 1893.

Image courtesy of #Manchester Art Gallery, manchesterartgallery.org

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#IrishArt #EuropeanArt #MaritimeArt #Cornwall #art #artsky #NewlynSchool

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The figurine of Ella Naper is wearing a 1930s style dress & is holding a bunch of flowers.

The figurine of Ella Naper is wearing a 1930s style dress & is holding a bunch of flowers.

Figurine of the artist #EllaNaper
By Ella Naper herself

Displayed 2023- @penleehousegallery.bsky.social
#Penzance #Cornwall

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#Art #Ceramic #NewlynSchool

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The figurine of Laura Knight models her in a blue dress with yellow cardigan. She has a coat draped over her shoulders & wears 1930s hat & shoes.

The figurine of Laura Knight models her in a blue dress with yellow cardigan. She has a coat draped over her shoulders & wears 1930s hat & shoes.

Figurine of the artist #LauraKnight
By Ella Naper

Displayed 2023- @penleehousegallery.bsky.social
#Penzance #Cornwall

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#Art #Ceramic #NewlynSchool

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My Grandad (who was born in Relubbus) loved Stanhope Forbes. When you see his work in person you realise what a master of colour he was.

#Newlyn #NewlynSchool

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