Joe Scarborough (born 1938) is an English artist. He is known for painting humorous scenes of Sheffield life, and everyday "real" images of the life and people of South Yorkshire.
Early life and education
Scarborough was born in Pitsmoor, Sheffield, in 1938.[1] His father was a foreman in a steelworks, and Scarborough says he was "breast-fed on socialism and the great move forward".[2][3]
He went to Marlcliffe School[4] in Sheffield, which existed between 1915 and 1964,[5] until the age of 16.[4]
Working life
After leaving school, Scarborough began work as a laboratory assistant at the Batchelors processed food company.[6][2]
He then became a face worker at the colliery at Thorpe Hesley,[2] and was inspired to paint by the contrast of the darkness of the mines and the lightness of the real world above the ground.[1]
In 1968 disenchantment with the pits led to numerous jobs - labourer, municipal park gardener and a dishwasher for some years, nurturing a dream to be a full-time painter. For years he pushed a handcart, packed with paintings round all his local pubs selling what he could in almost folkloric-like tradition, becoming at times like the characters he went on to portray in later scenes.[2] He started by painting ships, but they did not sell, and then started painting buildings, which were more successful.[7]
Scarborough's first one-man show lasted for two years at the Attic Cafe near Sheffield's main bus station. One-man and mixed exhibitions followed which took the everyday scenes of Yorkshire life from Sheffield to Rotherham to London to San Francisco to Chicago and back to Sheffield.[1]
Scarborough's paintings now appear in several major collections and numerous works have been imprinted.[1]
Scarborough was married: his wife, Audrey, was born in Alberta, Canada.[9] She died in 2002 and he moved to live in a narrowboat on Victoria Quays in Sheffield,[2] where he still lives as of June 2022[update].[4]
He suffered a suspected heart attack in November 2021 but recovered fully.[10]