Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level C , Case EW, Shelf 151

Cycling to the Distillery

Print
1984 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

For a press campaign for the whisky distillery Glenmorangie, the advertising agency commissioned wood engravings after market research undertaken by Gliddon & Gliddon found that the technique invoked notions of tradition and craftsmanship. The campaign focussed on the work and pastimes of the men who worked at the Glenmorangie Distillery, so artist George Tute (born 1933) was sent to meet the individuals who worked there. A reproduction is at E.734-1994 and a colour proof is at E.735-1994.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleCycling to the Distillery (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Wood engraving on paper
Brief description
Wood engraved proof of a press advertisement for Glenmorangie, designed by George Tute; British, 1984.
Physical description
Wood engraved proof of a press advertisement. It shows George MacKenzie, the mashman, on his way to the regular evening check of the mash. A reproduction is at E.734-1994 and a colour proof is at E.735-1994.
Dimensions
  • Sheet height: 30.8cm
  • Sheet width: 24.6cm
Production typeProof
Copy number
6/75
Marks and inscriptions
  • George Tute RE 1984 (Signed and dated in pencil)
  • Cycling to the Distillery 6/75 (Inscribed in pencil)
Gallery label
George TUTE (born 1933) Press advertisement and proof for Glenmorangie Whisky. 1991 Advertising agency TBWA Holmes Knight Ritchie Colour offset lithograph and wood engraving E.734, 735-1994 The following is an extract from the market research report carried out for the agency: The medium used for the illustrations in Glenmorangie advertising was seen as an important consideration. Respondents were aware that if any illustration looked cheap, shoddy, hurriedly executed or too modern in style, these attributes would gradually rub off onto the Glenmorangie brand itself... What a wood cut did suggest was: - Age. Respondents saw it as an 'old' technique... - Tradition. Respondents saw the wood cut as having a long and honourable history: it was not craze or passing fancy. - Craftsmanship. Making a woodcut was expected to be a difficult, specialised art, learned and practiced over many years... Respondents had little difficulty in recognising the work of a master craftsman in this execution. George Tute was sent up to Scotland to the distillery to meet the individuals who worked there. The campaign focused on the interests of these men. For example George Mackenzie, the Mashman, is shown on his regular evening check of the mash. (1994)
Object history
Acquired in connection with the display A Fine Line - Commercial Wood Engraving in Britain, V&A, 10 October 1994 - 26 March 1995.
Subjects depicted
Summary
For a press campaign for the whisky distillery Glenmorangie, the advertising agency commissioned wood engravings after market research undertaken by Gliddon & Gliddon found that the technique invoked notions of tradition and craftsmanship. The campaign focussed on the work and pastimes of the men who worked at the Glenmorangie Distillery, so artist George Tute (born 1933) was sent to meet the individuals who worked there. A reproduction is at E.734-1994 and a colour proof is at E.735-1994.
Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
Tute, George. Approaches to Wood Engraving. MA Thesis, Royal College of Art,London, 1984.
Collection
Accession number
E.735-1994

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Record createdNovember 18, 2008
Record URL
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