[Skip to content] [Skip to main navigation] [Skip to quick links] [Go to accessibility information]

Art UK
Menu
SIGN IN
Search
Shop
  • About
  • Discover
  • Learn
  • Stories
  • Donate Donate

Main menu

Close
  • Home
  • Search form

    • Discover

      • Artworks
      • Artists
      • Topics
      • People
      • Art terms
      • Stories
      • Curations
    • Learn

      • Learning resources
      • The Superpower of Looking
      • Visual literacy
      • Write on Art
    • Participate

      • Tagger
      • Curate
      • Art Detective
    • Visit

      • Venues
    • Support us

      • Become a Patron
      • Our funders
    • About

      • What we do
      • Our impact
      • Who we are
      • Who funds us
    • For collections

      • Partner collections
      • Digital skills for collections
    • Shop

      • Prints
      • Art themes
      • Books
      • Gifts
      • About the shop
  • Sign in
  • Register

Remember me (uncheck on a public computer)

By signing up you agree to terms and conditions and privacy policy

Forgotten password?

Enter your email address below and we’ll send you a link to reset your password


Cancel

I agree to the Art UK terms and conditions and privacy policy

Sign up to the Art UK newsletter, a weekly edit of insightful art stories


Finding Art UK useful? Support us to keep it free.

Donate Finding Art UK useful? Support us to keep it free.

Topics

Manufacturing industry

  • Summary
Union Wheel, Sheffield
Image credit: Sheffield Museums

Union Wheel, Sheffield

William James Stevenson (1835–1905)

Sheffield Museums

Most early industry was a rural activity, taking place where its raw materials, such as clay, iron and coal, were to be found. The rise of industry coincided with the Romantic movement and the dramatic visual appeal of fire, light and smoke inspired artists like Joseph Wright of Derby, de Loutherbourg and Turner.


Canals and railways allowed industry to move to the cities but the great factories of nineteenth-century Britain were less appealing to artists, though some owners commissioned interesting paintings of them.

Read more
Twentieth-century highlights include L. S. Lowry’s imaginative but pessimistic visions of the urban industrial landscapes, and the memorable shipbuilding paintings of Stanley Spencer, commissioned with other industrial subjects by the war artists’ scheme.

Artworks

  • A View near Matlock, Derbyshire with Figures Working beneath a Wooden Conveyor
    A View near Matlock, Derbyshire with Figures Working beneath a Wooden Conveyor Philip James de Loutherbourg (1740–1812)
    Yale Center for British Art
  • Rain, Steam, and Speed - The Great Western Railway
    Rain, Steam, and Speed - The Great Western Railway Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775–1851)
    The National Gallery, London
  • Gloster Aircraft, F.5/34
    Gloster Aircraft, F.5/34 C. E. P. Davis (active 1924–1989)
    Museum of Gloucester
  • Industrial Scene
    Industrial Scene John Wilson Carmichael (1799–1868)
    Nottingham City Museums & Galleries
  • Gloster Aircraft, E.28/39
    Gloster Aircraft, E.28/39 C. E. P. Davis (active 1924–1989)
    Museum of Gloucester
  • Sailing Ship (Man of War)
    Sailing Ship (Man of War) Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775–1851) (follower of)
    Williamson Art Gallery & Museum
  • Lorenz Herkomer
    Lorenz Herkomer Hubert von Herkomer (1849–1914)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • 340 more

Stories

  • Masters of the red-brick wall: L. S. Lowry and C. J. Holmes

    Samuel Shaw

  • Exhibitions spotlight: science, technology and industry

    Imelda Barnard

  • Self-portrait of Sam Fitton captured in his sketchbook
    Finding the funny: Sam Fitton at Gallery Oldham

    Karen Heatley

  • Jack Jones: centenary of a naïve painter

    Peter Wakelin

  • Emblems of the iron and steel industry: depicting modern blast furnaces in south Wales

    James Milne

  • The beginning of The End II – Evening
    George Little: the Welsh artist imaging the industrial landscape

    Peter Wakelin

  • Tree or chimney? Painting pollution with Camille Pissarro

    Samuel Shaw

  • From the earth comes light: women artists and British mining

    Jennifer Jasmine White

  • A damn good miner: Oliver Kilbourn's 'My Life as a Pitman' series

    Liz Ritson

  • Capturing Stockport's changing industrial landscape: an interview with Helen Clapcott

    Andrew Lambirth

  • The Welsh railway that revolutionised shopping

    John Evans

  • Still from HENI Talks' film on Claes Oldenburg's 'Bottle of Notes'
    Middlesbrough's 'Bottle of Notes': a sculpture with a secret message

    Elinor Morgan and HENI Talks

Learning resources

  • poip-watson-red-funnel-1.jpg
    Lesson plan
    Picturing our industrial past
    • KS3 (ENG)
      KS3 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)
  • gl-gm-2997-001-1.jpg
    Lesson plan
    Dressed not to kill: fashion and biodiversity
    • KS3 (ENG)
      KS3 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)
  • sf-recca-adjei-design-1-1.jpg
    Lesson plan
    Fast fashion and sustainable fashion design
    • KS4 (ENG)
      KS5 (ENG)
      KS4 (NI)
      KS5 (NI)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      CfE Sen. (SCO)
      KS4 (WAL)
      KS5 (WAL)
  • screenshot-2022-10-31-at-11-55-53-1.jpg
    Video
    Sculpture near you: 'Reflections of Bedford' by Rick Kirby
    • KS3 (ENG)
      KS4 (ENG)
      KS3 (WAL)
      KS4 (WAL)
      KS3 (NI)
      KS4 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      CfE L4 (SCO)

Do you know someone who would love this resource?
Tell them about it...

https://artuk.org/discover/topics/manufacturing-industry Copy
Link copied to clipboard!
  • bloomberg
  • dlb foundation
  • Supported by

    Arts CouncilArts Council
  • heritage fund
® is a registered trade mark of the Public Catalogue Foundation.
Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).

Follow us

    • Join us on Facebook
    • Follow us on YouTube
    • Top
  • Subscribe to newsletter
  • Donate to Art UK

Quick links

  • Contact us
  • FAQ
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy policy
  • AI policy
  • Use of cookies
  • Copyright notice
  • Accessibility
  • Shop
  • Disclaimer
  • Jobs
  • Website credits
® is a registered trade mark of the Public Catalogue Foundation.
Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).