Paintings
- "Greenock", watercolour, (1886), sold by McTears 20.09.02
- "Parkheid", oil on canvas, (c. 1886), sold by Sotheby's March 2006
- "Self Portrait", oil on canvas, (c. 1886), Kelvingrove Art Gallery, Glasgow
- “Backcourt, Bartholomew Street", oil on canvas, (1887), British Museum
- “Tarbet Loch Fyne”, watercolour, (1888), Hunterian Art Gallery, Glasgow
- “Children at a burn” (1889), oil on canvas, Tate Britain, London
- “Repairing the bicycle" (the artist’ younger brother, Barclay Pringle), oil on canvas, (c. 1889), Kelvingrove Art Gallery, Glasgow
- “Portrait of the artist’s elder brother, Christopher Nisbet Pringle” (c. 1890), oil on canvas, Tate Britain, London
- “View from the artist’s window in Maukinfauld Road", oil on canvas, (c. 1890), Kelvingrove Art Gallery, Glasgow
- “Muslin Street”, (1896), oil on canvas, City Art Centre Edinburgh
- “Mrs Newberry and Daughter", oil on canvas, (1902), Hunterian Art Gallery, Glasgow
- “Bosham”, Watercolour, (1903), Tate Britain London
- "Man with a tobacco pouch" oil on canvas, (1903), sold by The Leicester Galleries 2006
- “Two figures on a fence” oil on canvas (1904), Kelvingrove Art Gallery, Glasgow
- “Girls at play”, oil on canvas, (c. 1905), Hunterian Art Gallery, Glasgow
- “Poultry Yard, Gartcosh”, oil on canvas, (1906), National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh
- “Tollcross, Glasgow”, oil on canvas, (1908), Hunterian Art Gallery, Glasgow
- "Portrait of a boy, bust length, wearing a grey suit and a pink cravat in a summer landscape.", (1910), Allposter.com
- “Caudebec” oil on canvas, (1910), Kelvingrove Art Galleries, Glasgow
- “Mrs Helen Meldrum”, black chalk drawing, (1923), Hunterian Art Gallery, Glasgow
- “Mrs Helen Meldrum", oil on canvas, (1924), Hunterian Art Gallery, Glasgow
- “The Window” (1924), oil on canvas, Tate Britain, London
Read more about this topic: John Quinton Pringle
Famous quotes containing the word paintings:
“The invention of photography provided a radically new picture-making processa process based not on synthesis but on selection. The difference was a basic one. Paintings were madeconstructed from a storehouse of traditional schemes and skills and attitudesbut photographs, as the man on the street put, were taken.”
—Jean Szarkowski (b. 1925)
“the great orange bed where we lie
like two frozen paintings in a field of poppies.”
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“A thousand moral paintings I can show
That shall demonstrate these quick blows of Fortunes
More pregnantly than words.”
—William Shakespeare (15641616)