Special to ARMCHAIR GOLF
Copyright © John Coyne. All rights reserved. Used with permission.
| Artist Charles McGill. |
“I thought the contrast would be interesting,” McGill says today. “That was the very first thought of the possibility of using a golf bag as an object or subject in my art.”
Although not the typical artist motif, McGill has found that a golf bag reveals more than its original function suggests. It is a contextually powerful object that is ripe with its own significant baggage. His interest in the golf bag as an artistic object was fostered by his interest in the game itself.
“I love golf,” says McGill, who received his BFA from School of Visual Arts in New York City, and his MFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art. “I love to play it and watch it on television. I was even thinking about turning pro at one point so that I could be a teaching pro.”
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| The bag art of Charles McGill. |
“I was able to see how members were as people as opposed to what I imagined or assume rich members to be and how they might act. I think a lot of people think members of country clubs are snooty with an aversion to anyone who isn’t white or rich or privileged. That wasn’t my experience. I met some of the nicest and most generous people I’ve ever encountered. And they were consistently pleasant. They were often grounded in faith and lived by it.”
Today, many of his golf objects are displayed in country clubs like those he worked in as a caddie. Robert Rubin, who built The Bridge Country Club in Bridgehampton, New York, was one of the first country club owners to features McGill’s work.
An avid collector of contemporary act, Rubin came across McGill’s golf bag constructions and according to McGill, “it was a match made in artist/patron heaven. The club house at Bridge Country Club is a perfect setting for my work and Mr. Rubin even made me an honorary member of the club which is great because I can’t afford that kind of cabbage.”
McGill’s talent for golf art also goes beyond golf bags. In 2005 he illustrated Tom Patri’s The Six-Spoke Approach to Golf published by Lyons Press in 2005. These pen-and-ink drawings show his skill not only as an artist, but also as one who loves the game.
Today, McGill lives in Peekskill, New York, and teaches art at Norwalk Community College in Norwalk, Connecticut. This month a special exhibition of his golf bag constructions are on display at The College of New Rochelle in New Rochelle, New York.
More of Charles McGill’s work can be seen at www.artnegro.com.
John Coyne is a bestselling author whose latest book is The Caddie Who Won the Masters. Learn more at John Coyne Books.

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