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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Barry Glendenning

The fight to keep Lowry’s Going to the Match in public view

A visitor walks past ‘Going to the Match’ at an exhibition.
A visitor walks past ‘Going to the Match’ at an exhibition. Photograph: Karim Sahib/AFP/Getty Images

ART ATTACK

Famous for his paintings of the matchstalk men and matchstalk animals that populate his industrial landscapes inspired by the north-west of England, LS Lowry disliked being called an artist, preferring instead to describe himself as “a man who paints”. Upon being labelled “a naive Sunday painter” by one particularly condescending art critic, he countered by pointing out that he was “a Sunday painter who paints every day of the week”. Since his death in 1976, Lowry’s paintings and drawings have sold for numbers heading into the millions and arguably his most famous, Going to the Match, is owned by the PFA and is going on sale at Christie’s auction house next month. It is expected to fetch up to £8m, which at the time of writing is still a lot of money despite the best attempts of the Tories to flatline our economy.

Currently on display at the magnificent Lowry museum in Salford, Going to the Match depicts a scene outside and inside Burnden Park, the former ground of Bolton Wanderers, not far from his home in Pendlebury. But with the gallery and local council unable to afford it and the PFA obliged to sell the painting they paid £1.9m for in 1999 in order to raise funds for their charitable arm, the mayor of Salford has appealed to wealthy football players and clubs in the area to consider buying it to prevent the “huge tragedy and scandal” of it becoming part of a private collection and disappearing from public view.

“My fear is a work that has been publicly available at the Lowry for 22 years, that champions the work of one of our great artists, is potentially going to be lost from public view and public access,” sighed Paul Dennett. “I’d like to make a personal plea for the footballing community here to look at retaining this painting for the people of Greater Manchester. There’s a lot of money in that community, so finding £8m-plus wouldn’t be too difficult.” While there is no suggestion Dennett had any specific members of said community in mind, The Fiver notes with interest that in 2016, a certain Manchester City owner, who is never averse to a bit of PR, bought an original Lowry for manager Manuel Pellegrini as a parting gift. Meanwhile at Old Trafford, the Glazers might be tempted to do the decent thing, seeing as keeping Going to the Match in the public spotlight would cost them less than a third of what they spaffed on shoving Ole Gunnar Solskjær and Ralf Rangnick out of it.

“We’d like to have a conversation with the buyer [of Going To The Match] about the responsibility that comes with owning such a work,” said Julia Fawcett, chief suit of the Lowry museum and gallery. “This isn’t just any painting. We have school trips, children coming to study the work. It’s clearly linked to the social history of our city. It’s seen not just by traditional art lovers; the painting draws in the ordinary people it represents. We have coachloads of football fans coming in ahead of a match.” The sight of supporters stopping off to see the painting while literally going to the match is one that would almost certainly have tickled Lowry.

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“I know what they’re going through and bring very much a German mentality to English football at this level, but with my Scottish personality” – Huddersfield’s new manager, Mark Fotheringham, is bringing fresh ideas and a potential identity crisis to his new charges after leaving his role as Hertha Berlin No 2.

NEXT GENERATION 2022

Feel older than usual as 60 of the world’s best players are picked out in this year’s edition of the interactive special.

The future, earlier.
The future, earlier. Illustration: Guardian Design

FIVER LETTERS

“I enjoyed the business desk/sports desk crossover in yesterday’s Fiver. I’d like to plug another: England fans are not the only ones looking to Gareth Southgate to see them through the economic crisis. Aldi UK boss Giles Hurley said he hoped for Southgate to do no less than save Christmas. ‘If one of the home nations performs it could make for a really interesting celebration,’ Hurley said. ‘I’m actually very confident that the public will celebrate this Christmas.’ Perhaps he’s referring to Wales” – Jasper Jolly.

“I had thought briefly that Southgate saying ‘we’ve got to back our best players’ (Friday’s Fiver) meant he would be dropping Maguire. Maybe he should consider it” – Adrian Riley.

“Re: Tim Woods’s mail on Turkish newspaper Fanatik’s comments (yesterday’s Fiver letters). Could it be that they meant the Faroe Islands had more GOATs (Greatest Of All Time), rather than domesticated ruminants? That would possibly explain how they managed to beat Turkey” – Neal Butler.

“By any measure, this is quite an achievement by Dundee United” – Jim Scullion.

There but for the grace of God, etc.
There but for the grace of God, etc. Photograph: Jim Scullion

“May I be the first to question why Big Website is now only publishing an extract of The Fiver rather than its full glory? Did The Man decide that another obstacle to people reading it was needed? I’d have thought the content itself would be enough to put people off. Yes, I have now subscribed. No, I don’t know why either” – Dom Virdee-Livens.

Send your letters to the.boss@theguardian.com. And you can always tweet The Fiver via @guardian_sport. Today’s winner of our prizeless letter o’ the day is … Neal Butler.

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