Painter of colourful works, draughtsman and teacher, born in Greenock, Renfrewshire, seventh child of a Clydeside brass-founder. At Glasgow School of Art from 1930 Galt was teased by other students about a poverty that forced him to make his own paints and use his hair to make brushes. His tutors termed Galt “the human camera” and his fellow-student David Donaldson said that he could “out-Orpen Orpen”. On graduation, Galt won the Torrance Award and his diploma work toured Scotland’s art schools as an example for students to follow. When Galt’s painting The Stable Boy was bought by the Caird Museum bequest in Greenock he came to the attention of the theatre critic James Agate who proved a valuable patron, introducing him to the Redfern Gallery, in London.
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In 1938 Galt won a Carnegie Travelling Scholarship which took him to Paris, where lived for two years in Montparnasse. Forced to return to Scotland with the onset of World War II, Galt taught briefly before flying with the Royal Air Force. After demobilisation, Galt taught part-time at Glasgow School of Art before being appointed art master to Greenock High School. He showed with the Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts, of which he was a prize-winning member, RSA and RSW, but found it hard to bring up a family in post-war austerity Glasgow. When he was so hard up that he felt he must resign from Glasgow Art Club the committee refused, forgoing his membership fee. After his death, Panter & Hall, which took over the management of his estate, began to re-establish Galt’s reputation. The gallery included his work in 200 Years of Scottish Painting, 2003, and in 2004 gave him a solo show.
Text source: 'Artists in Britain Since 1945' by David Buckman (Art Dictionaries Ltd, part of Sansom & Company)