Robert MacBryde (Portuguese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Robert MacBryde" in Portuguese language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank Portuguese rank
3rd place
6th place
1st place
1st place
low place
low place

books.google.com

  • Bristow 2010, p. 13. Bristow, Roger (2010). The Last Bohemians: The Two Roberts: Colquhoun and MacBryde. [S.l.]: Sansom. 416 páginas. ISBN 9781906593193. Robert McBride (the change to MacBryde came after he had left art school) was almost exactly a year older than Colquhoun. He was born in Maybole on the 5 December 1913 at 60 
  • Campbell 1993, p. 79. Campbell, Mungo (1993). The Line of Tradition. [S.l.]: National Galleries of Scotland. 95 páginas. ISBN 9780903598378. Worked in a factory before entering Glasgow School of Art in 1932 where he met his companion and collaborator, Robert Colquhoun. They travelled in Italy 1937-9 before returning to Scotland. From 1947 they made lithographs and drawings for Miller's Press in Lewes. Their commissions for the stage included Massine's ballet Donald of the Burthens. Died Dublin. 
  • Riley 1994, p. 48. Riley, Richard (1994). Out of Print: British Printmaking, 1946-1976. [S.l.]: British Council. 48 páginas. ISBN 9780863552335. 48) Robert MacBryde 1913-1966. Born Ayrshire, Scotland. Studied Glasgow School of Art 1932–37. MacBryde met his friend and life - long companion Robert Colquhoun at Glasgow School of Art in 1933 and from then until Colquhoun's premature death in 1962 their biographies read almost 
  • Strang 2006, p. 38. Strang, Alice (2006). Consider the Lilies: Scottish Painting 1910-1980 from the Collection of the City of Dundee. [S.l.]: McManus Galleries and Museum, Dundee City Council. 112 páginas. ISBN 9780900344619. The two Roberts', as they were known, graduated in 1938 and spent that summer at Hospitalfield House where James Cowie was warden. Travelling scholarships enabled them to study in France and Italy. On their return to Scotland Colquhoun trained as a teacher and in 1940 he joined the Royal Army Medical Corps in Edinburgh. He was invalided out the following year, after which the Roberts moved to London. 

undiscoveredscotland.co.uk

web.archive.org