7 APRIL, 2023
• Al Bell’s Deep Forest Light is in the Spring Exhibition at Torrance Gallery in Edinburgh. See ART NEWS page 10.













7 APRIL, 2023
• Al Bell’s Deep Forest Light is in the Spring Exhibition at Torrance Gallery in Edinburgh. See ART NEWS page 10.
A copy of Shadows and Light: The Extraordinary Life of James McBey. A pair of festival passes to Scotland’s newest piano festival, Arts at Loaningdale, Biggar.
See page 36
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Until Jul 2
Featuring print, textiles, video, sculpture and photography, this is the culmination of a series of residencies hosted across five European printmaking studios, including Edinburgh Printmakers, which supported artists whose practices have been disrupted by displacement and migration. For some, including several Ukrainian artists, the experience is more recent, while others have developed their careers over decades in their new home countries.
Now living in the UK, Ireland and across Europe, 30 artists from around the world, including Syria, Ukraine, Bosnia Herzegovina, Iran, Iraq, Somalia, Yemen, Kosovo and Turkey, have created new works exploring themes such as the concept of home, the enduring experience of war, the nature of moving across borders and changing selfidentity.
The Creative Europefunded project also offered month-long residencies at print studios in Amsterdam, Cork, Ljubljana, Slovenia and Odense, providing space to experiment, work with studio technicians and discover new techniques. edinburghprintmakers.co.uk
Until May 14
This show features over 40 artists, some exhibiting at the gallery for the first time, including Rosalind Walker, Brett Watson, Carolyn Bell, Daniel Martin and Al Bell. With a range of price points and styles, artwork is being sold “off the wall”, so you can take your purchase away with you rather than have to wait until the end of the show. The gallery offers free or assisted P&P rates for both UK and international delivery. torrancegallery.co.uk
Until Jul 8
This exhibition includes over 70 eclectic pieces drawing on artworks by invited international makers inspired by the textile guru Frank Havrah “Kaffe” Fassett MBE. Considered one of the most successful artists and designers working in contemporary craft, he is best known for his colourful designs in the decorative arts, including needlepoint, patchwork, knitting, painting, ceramics and mosaic. Curated by Fassett along with Dennis Nothdruft from the Fashion and Textile Museum, the exhibition includes quilts, cushions, clothes and archival material. dovecotstudios.com
The next live and online auction at Lyon & Turnbull in Edinburgh is to includes a selection of pieces by designers such as William Morris, C. F. A. Voysey, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Archibald Knox, Peter Waals, Sir Charles Locke Eastlake, Edward Barnsley, William Arthur Smith Benson, E. W. Godwin, Charles Robert Ashbee, Arthur Simpson, Christopher Dresser and Jessie Marion King. lyonandturnbull.com
This exhibition at Aberfeldy Gallery celebrates one of Scotland’s longest running galleries. Current owners Adam and Anna Seward took over the gallery in 2017 after 19 years under the ownership of Judy Proudfoot. Anna’s connection to the gallery dates back to its inception, as her grandparents, Roger and Merril Sylvester, made up half of the quartet who ran the gallery for its first 15 years. The anniversary exhibition features contemporary art by over 50 established and emerging artists based in Scotland. aberfeldygallery.co.uk
The current exhibition at City Contemporary Art in Perth features dramatic landscapes painted ‘en plein air’ and presented in The Room, the gallery’s dedicated solo show space. There is also plenty time to catch the annual Spring Show, featuring new work by regular gallery artists such as Nael Hanna, Greer Ralston, Jonathan Mitchell and Fee Dickson Reid. ccart.co.uk
Currently running at the Art & Craft Collective in Edinburgh is the Ukrainian abstract painter’s first solo exhibition in the UK. artcraftcollective.co.uk
Featured artist at Gallery Q in Dundee is Moy Mackay, who uses merino fleece fibres, in the same way that a painter uses brushstrokes, to depict the colours and textures of the beautiful Tweed Valley in the Scottish Borders. This coupling of a traditional craft and a fine art application has brought Moy a large fan base following numerous exhibitions throughout the UK and in the US. There is also a mixed exhibition of paintings by gallery regulars and newcomers as well as wood sculptures, mirrors, trays, prints, handmade glass, ceramics and jewellery. galleryq.co.uk
Until Apr 22
Featured artist at Gallery Heinzel in Aberdeen is John O’Neill, who recently featured in SkyArts Landscape Artist of the Year, conspicuous in his trademark orange jumpsuit. Working mainly in oils and watercolour, O’Neill’s subject matter encompasses the hills and farmland of Aberdeenshire, where he is based, Norwegian landscapes inspired by the years he lived there, historic landmarks and city and suburban streetscapes.
This exhibition features 34 paintings created both ‘en plein air’ and in the studio along with Lois Carson’s most recent studio ceramic work inspired by the natural world around her Aberdeenshire studio. galleryheinzel.com
Featured artist Ann Cowan, who is inspired by the architecture and cityscapes of Edinburgh. She is also creating a series of concertina sketchbooks featuring the harbours of East Lothian and Fife. She explains: “The linear form of these books lends itself to representing the walks I take to explore these places. I’m able to show different perspectives, jump from one spot to another and pick out compositions that catch my eye”. larksgallery.com
Until Apr 29
Liz Myhill’s new exhibition takes its title from a word meaning to roam or wander without aim. Says Liz: “To stravaig is, for me, an unbounded freedom, where I feel most at home and content. It may only be as far as the end of the croft on Skye, where I roamed as a child, or it may be high into the mountains, along lonely coastlines or among scattered islands and skerries. These places observed in solitude exert a powerful hold, a desire to understand them more fully by bearing witness to their character as it undergoes subtle shifts through the hours, days, weeks, months and years.”
“Many of my works are
completed in one burst of energy while out on location and subject to the inconstancy of changing weather conditions. Although challenging at times, it is this unpredictability that I find so exciting – the raw power of the elements and their ability to shape the work. There is an urgency to being out in these conditions, a complete absorption in the moment.”
The exhibition features 40 works, which can be bought off the website using a card or PayPal. Frames is also part of the Own Art scheme, which allows buyers to make 10 interest-free payments. framesgallery.co.uk
8th Annual Exhibition
Maclaurin Art Gallery, Ayr
Until Apr 30
For the first time in Ayrshire, the Scottish Society of Botanical Artists 8th Annual Exhibition at the Maclaurin Art Gallery in Ayr includes affordable ‘mini paintings’ following the success of the idea last year.
Also showing is A Sense of Place, a small exhibition of work by some of the artists who have taken part in Open Studios Ayrshire in recent years, featuring paintings, ceramics and silver jewellery. themaclaurin.org.uk
Until Apr 22
The current exhibition at the Harbour Cottage Gallery in Kirkcudbright showcases members of a group dedicated to promoting excellence in all aspects of contemporary textiles. Their work shows a high level of technical expertise (everyone has followed some formal recognised education in textiles), expressing a variety of subjects through differing approaches to design.
www.edge-textileartists-scotland.com
www.harbourcottagegallery.org.uk
Until Apr 16
The Scottish Ornithologists’ Club (SOC) is showing an exhibition of prints, mostly woodcuts and linocuts, and etchings by an artist who is inspired by the birds and wildlife she sees close to home in Galloway and on frequent visits to Orkney and Shetland. An elected member of the Society of Wildlife Artists, she is known for her colourful, bold compositions, sometimes flirting with abstraction.
The SOC is a charity promoting the study, protection and enjoyment of wild birds and their habitats in Scotland. With sweeping views of Aberlady Bay Local Nature Reserve, the Donald Watson Gallery is one of the best venues for wildlife art in the UK. A year-round exhibition programme showcases wildlife artists working in a variety of media, including painting, printmaking, sculpture and photography. the-soc.org.uk
Apr 28
Artisanand Gallery features twoartists with very different approaches to their work, one more focused on the style and function of the final piece, while for the other the artmaking process itself is essential to living life.
Working with a variety of recycled and salvaged materials, Katy Galbraith makes mosaic artworks which can be either decorative (pictorial or sculptural) or functional (mirrors, table tops). This collection showcases her signature style of brightly coloured pieces, reflecting her love of flowers. Some of her works are suitable for outside and can be considered “garden art”.
Terry Howson creates vibrant, abstract landscapes using watercolours, oils and cold wax, which she often distills herself. Continuing to experiment, she is also working in digital imagery. She exhibits in Scotland and France, where she has run her own gallery. artisanand.co.uk
Until Apr 22
This selection aim to lift the spirits with a mix of abstract and semi-abstract works as well as figurative, still life, floral, wildlife and landscape paintings. Established names such as Fee Dickson Reid with large scale seascapes, pastel specialist Margaret Evans and Kate Bentley SWA with interior scenes are joined by gallery newcomers Kerry Souter and Christine Clark and ten or so returning artists. There is also sculpture, glasswork, artist books, ceramics and jewellery. whitehousegallery.co.uk
Until May 20
This exhibition features seascapes, landscapes and cityscapes as well as glasswork, woodwork and jewellery. Artist include new to the gallery Sheena Christie and Nichol Wheatley (ahead of his solo show in June) along with gallery favourites Senja Brendon, John Bathgate, Scott MacDonald, David Marshall and Helen L. Robertson. glasgowgallery.co.uk
Until May 13
Based on a dramatic folk story by Duncan Williamson, this exhibition takes its title from an animated film by John McGeogh using paintings by John Slaven. The paintings are on display throughout the exhibition accompanied by a continuous screening of the film.
James Hawkins, artist and Rhue Art co-owner along with wife Flick, has just launched his new website detailing his own practice and the couple’s experience running a gallery in the northwest Highlands. rhueart.co.uk
jameshawkinsart.co.uk
Until Jun 11
Gallery
This selection brings together around 70 photo portraits of internationally renowned artists by over 20 photographers working for the celebrated Magnum agency.
Artists such as Andy Warhol, Georgia O’Keefe, Ai Weiwei and Yayoi Kusama are shown in moments of creativity in their work environments, from the cramped studios of the Parisian avant-garde artists at the beginning of the 20th century to the New York lofts of the American pop and minimal artists to the highly professional studios of the international stars of the contemporary art market. aberdeencity.gov.uk/AAGM
Until Apr 10
Holly Macdonald,
Holly Macdonald: Twinned with Mars
The Alchemy Experiment, Glasgow
Until Apr 13
This features nature-themed drawings and paintings of imagined and romanticised landscapes. alchemyexperiment.com
Art@47, the base and gallery space of the Pittenweem Arts Festival, begins its exhibition programme with a show in which Kate Downie responds to the power of nature to heal and nurture, while Dorothy Black is fascinated in capturing the twists and turns of plants and how they change over time from bud to withered form.
Next up is Here’s One I Made Surlier
(Apr 21-30), a diverse, all-star show by sculptors, painters and craftmakers David and Robert Mach, Phil Jupitus and Garry Millar. pittenweemartsfestival.co.uk
Until May 26
Resipole’s current show features new work by the gallery’s wide roster of artists, including wildlife and landscape paintings by Alan B. Hayman and Colin Woolf, abstract expressive works by Jane Rushton and Morag Young, small scale landscapes by Lisa Houston, figurative and still life paintings by Andrew Sinclair, ceramics by Helen Michie, seascapes by Jim Wright and wood-turning work by John Hodgson. resipolestudios.co.uk
The High St. Gallery has a large collection of Georgian to midcentury retro art glass, pottery from the Arts & Crafts, Art Nouveau, Art Deco and midcentury periods and new paintings by James Macaulay, Davy Brown and Hazel Campbell. highstgallery.co.uk
Maisie & Mac is currently featuring three women artists. Claire Wills creates textured, boldly colourful, abstract interpretations of places or cultures she has experienced or photographed on visits to locations such as Tanzania, Europe, Jamaica and the British Isles. A lover of designs such as those by William Morris and henna patterns from her own heritage, Husna Hussain incorporates into her work treasured items she has collected on her travels. Using thread as her medium, Moira Third creates wall-mounted embroidered works made to be quietly contemplative, suggesting the silence she experiences after a viral infection left her deaf. maisieandmac.com
Until May 28
Velvet Easel is presenting work by over 50 artists, both gallery regulars and newcomers such as Sky Portrait Artist of the Year contestant Kelly-Anne Cairns. All media are represented, including figurative, landscape and abstract paintings of all sizes as well as prints, ceramics, glass, sculpture and jewellery. There is a wide range of price points and the gallery is a member of the Own Art scheme, which enables buyers to spread the cost of purchases. velveteasel.co.uk
This is an exhibition from the Lindsay Anderson Archive celebrating the life and work of one of the most distinctive British film-makers of the 20th century. Part of the generation which transformed the post-war cultural and artistic world in Britain, Lindsay Anderson’s films reflected life and society through films such as This Sporting Life (1963), starring Richard Harris as a Yorkshire rugby league player whose romantic life is not as successful as his sporting life, If…. (1969), with Malcolm McDowell as a schoolboy leading a savage revolt in an English public school, and O Lucky Man! (1972), with McDowell again as an ambitious coffee salesman in a series of improbable and adventures which challenge his naive idealism. The exhibition marks the centenary of Anderson’s birth. macrobertartscentre.org
Ken McClymont: Large Works
William Dick: Paperworks
Beacon Arts Centre, Greenock
Apr 8-May 6
In his abstract paintings Ken McClymont repeatedly uses a simple, circular motif and juxtaposes balanced and contrasting colour to provide what he would like to be viewed as “a worthy and enduring piece of two-dimensional art-music”.
Accepting the notion that there are two distinct forms of abstract painting – namely, geometric and organic – William Dick explores minimalist structures in an expressively painterly way. beaconartscentre.co.uk
Fidra Fine Art’s current current exhibition includes works bursting with colour by some of Scotland’s finest contemporary artists working in a variety of styles. fidrafineart.co.uk
This exhibition featuring 21 photogravures of drawings produced by the American artist between 1915 and 1963. Photogravure is a printmaking process which produces etchings with the tone and detail of a photograph through exposure onto a copper plate. Renowned for her distinctive balance of abstraction with figuration and her tenacity in pursuing her innovative style, Georgia O’Keeffe (1887-1986) is one of the most important artists in 20th century American art. Her iconic works of organic forms such as flowers and bones, surreal abstractions, rural landscapes and urban cityscapes broke new ground for women artists. Although best known as a painter, drawing was central to O’Keeffe’s practice in depicting the curve of a flower petal, a desert horizon, a wave of hair or a winding road. It was her pivotal charcoal abstractions which secured her inaugural exhibitions in 1916-17, organised by the prominent photographer and gallerist Alfred Stieglitz, who later became her husband. eastayrshireleisure.com/events/georgia-o-keeffe-memories-of-drawings/
Until Jun 4
This exhibition, featuring works by 60 tenants of studios across the country, continues the partnership with Workshop and Artists Studio Provision Scotland (WASPS), which provides affordable studios for artists, makers and the creative industries.
kirkcudbrightgalleries.org.uk waspsstudios.org.uk
Ongoing
Visitors to this exhibition can see over 200 artworks spanning seven centuries in the revamped main gallery. Many of the works have never been on show before, while others have been hidden from view for a number of years. These include Sea Devil’s Watchtower (1960) by Alan Davie, A Paris Street (c.190608) by the Scottish Colourist S. J. Peploe and The Great Honey Coloured Moon (c.1911) by “Glasgow Girl” Jessie Marion King. Artworks which have undergone conservation, giving them a new lease of life, include Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh’s stunning gesso panel The White Rose and the Red Rose.
The Hunterian is home to the University of Glasgow’s extensive art collection, which includes paintings of international importance, the largest print collection in Scotland, a growing contemporary art collection and an outdoor sculpture courtyard.
glasgow.ac.uk/hunterian
Nael Hanna
Fraser Gallery, St Andrews
One of Scotland’s longest established galleries is saying hello to spring with some stunning floral paintings fresh from the studio of Nael Hanna. frasergallery.co.uk
Featuring newly commissioned sculptures and a sculptural installation by two artists exploring boundary spaces and the ways humans impose order on the world. generatorprojects.co.uk
Alberta Whittle: Create Dangerously
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art/Modern One, Edinburgh
Until Jan 7, 2024
Scots-Barbadian artist Alberta Whittle’s star has risen in the last five years, as she has picked up one accolade after another and represented Scotland at the 2022 Venice Biennale. This is her biggest exhibition to date, bringing together the full range of her multidisciplinary practice alongside her work from Venice. If you think of her principally as a film-maker, this is an opportunity to see her film work in the context of painting, drawing, textiles, sculpture and installation. From the passionately political to the gently celebratory, the show takes in the many moods and themes of her work. nationalgalleries.org
Jasleen Kaur: Alter Altar Tramway, Glasgow
Until Oct 8
Jasleen Kaur grew up in Pollokshields, a stone’s throw from Tramway. Now London-based, she returns to her old stamping ground with a solo exhibition in which she uses installations, kinetic sculptures and sound to explore elements of her personal and cultural history. Working in the large scale space of Tramway 2, she interweaves aspects of Sikh and Muslim heritage and her memories of growing up in Scotland. Axminster carpet, bottles of Irn Bru, football scarves, family photographs and even a red Ford Escort are all part of her imagined landscape of both the sacred and secular. A soundtrack fuses Sufi Islamic music with political pop, colonial instruments and the artist’s own voice. tramway.org
Until Jun 11
Given the pulling down of statues around the world during the Black Lives Matter campaign, one might expect destruction in this 40-minute film by Argentinian artist Sebastian Diaz Morales. However, the film, which was made in Jakarta with members of the influential Indonesian art collective ruangrupa, is affectionate rather than iconoclastic. Members of the collective are filmed in conversation with the city’s statues, mostly created in the 1960s when the nation was newly independent and now surrounded by traffic-clogged motorways. As the artists reflect on their own lives, they remind us how statues bridge the gap between generations, becoming fixed reference points in the story of a changing city. collective-edinburgh.art
Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh
Until May 27 May
Taking as their theme money – specifically, debt – and how it has been an instrument of colonialism and exploitation, artists from countries including the Philippines and the Democratic Republic of Congo propose ways that these issues might be transformed, from a forest which uses artificial intelligence to run its own affairs to an installation of 50 mortar shell casings repurposed as plant pots. It is also the first chance in Scotland to see the influential work Naming the Money by Turner Prize-winner Lubaina Himid. Both angry and thoughtful, the exhibition continues the gallery’s ambitious programme of bringing together work on particular themes by artists from around the world. trg.ed.ec.uk
Apr 8-Jun 3
This exhibition marks the end of Confluence, a year-long project aimed at building links and fostering understanding between the art communities of Marrakech and Glasgow. The show explores the work of three artists – Asha Athman, Islam Shabana and Samra Mayanja – who have taken part in residencies and research projects. Their practices are connected by an interest in the sea as a contested space culturally and politically. Tracing submerged stories and exploring fragmented worlds, the show is built around the idea of ‘barzakh’, an in between, liminal space or a point of transition. The work explores specific events, situations and mythologies tied to these territories between borders.
cca-glasgow.com
Kira Freije: River by Night
Cample Line, Thornhill, Dumfriesshire
Until Jun 10
If contemporary art is usually an urban phenomenon, Cample Line is building a reputation for challenging that by inviting artists to make work for a space in the midst of rural Dumfriesshire. London-based Kira Freije is the latest artist to be invited to the gallery, reconfiguring existing work and making new work to respond to the location. (The title refers to the river Cample, which flows right next to the gallery). A graduate of the Ruskin School of Art in Oxford, Freije began by working with a blacksmith to learn metalwork techniques and often works with materials found in scrapyards as well as with blown glass. Her evocative pieces have been described as poetic assemblages, conveying fragments of narrative and a sense of time and place.
campleline.org.uk
Photographer Rachael Talibart captures the ebb and flow of the English coastline in the days surrounding violent storms with images from her book Tides and Tempests. rachaeltalibart.com
1 Dufa (Norse mythology: ‘pitching wave’)
2 Medusa (Greek monster figure with snakes for hair)
3 Echo (mountain nymph in Greek mythology)
4 Sedna (an Inuit goddess of the sea)
5 Apollo (Greek and Roman god)
6 Loki (Norse trickster god)
7 White Walker (Ask a Game of Thrones fan.)
8 Leviathan (a sea monster in Mesopotamian and Hebrew tradition)
Apr 25-30
Arts at Loaningdale is launching Scotland’s newest piano festival. The Spring Piano Festival in Biggar in the Clydesdale countryside features Canadian Angela Hewitt, known for her performances of Bach and here turning her talent to works by Mozart (Fantasie for Piano No. 3 in D minor, K397 ) and Beethoven (Sonata for Piano no. 7 in D major, Op. 10 No. 3).
Also featuring are: Brian Kellock, one of the UK’s most in-demand jazz pianists: Spain’s Miriam Gomez-Moran, who brings her doctoral research on Liszt into her performances of his works; Worbey & Farrell, who lighten the classical mood with some wicked humour; and the Russian-born, Scottish-based virtuoso Nikita Lukinov in the festival’s first Emerging Artist Concert.
artsatloaningdale.org
Venues across Scotland
Apr 12-May 5
Scottish fiddler and singer Isla Ratcliff is setting off on her first headline solo tour across Scotland, showcasing material from her debut album The Castalia, which features both traditional and self-penned tunes inspired by time spent in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. She says: “The music on the album is all about bringing people together, and it celebrates the power of music in doing so.”
A graduate of the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland and Oxford University, Isla was a semi-finalist in the BBC Young Traditional Musician of the Year 2022 competition and was nominated for Up and Coming Artist of the Year 2022 at the MG Alba Scots Trad Music Awards. She has performed at Celtic Connections, the Edinburgh Festival Fringe and the BBC Proms and is accompanied on the tour by Ellen Gira (cello) and Iona Reid (piano).
islaratcliff.com/gigs
St Andrews, Edinburgh & Glasgow
Apr 19-21
The Scottish Chamber Orchestra continue their season with Summer Nights with Karen Cargill, as the Scottish mezzo-soprano guides you through the joys and sorrows of the luscious love songs in Berlioz’s bittersweet Les nuits d’été. The programme also includes Beethoven’s Symphony No. 8 and 19th century German composer Emilie Mayer’s Symphony No. 1 sco.org.uk
Soundhouse
Traverse, Edinburgh
Apr 10 & 17
Traditional music promoters
Soundhouse continue their Monday evening concert series with Mike + Ruthy, whose catalogue of original songs displays an honest and raw approach to Americana with harmony-driven fiddle and banjo tunes.
Next up is multi-instrumentalist and singer Megan Henderson, playing selections from her debut album Pilgrim Souls, accompanied by Su-a Lee (cello/saw) and Alistair Iain Paterson (piano/harmonium). traverse.co.uk soundhouse.org.uk
Apr 13
The BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra performs Beethoven’s Sixth Symphony, the “Pastoral”, under the direction of Chief Conductor Ryan Wigglesworth. The composer’s ode to the natural world is accompanied by a rare performance of The Sermon to the Birds from Olivier Messiaen’s colourful score to his gargantuan opera Saint François d’Assise bbc.co.uk/bbcsso
Scottish Ballet
A Streetcar Named Desire Glasgow, Inverness, Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Kirkwall & Stornoway
Apr 13-May 6
Scottish Ballet take to the road with a stylish adaptation of Tennessee Williams’ famous play, which is one the most performed plays and has inspired many adaptations in other forms.
In steamy 1940s New Orleans, fading southern belle Blanche DuBois moves into her sister Stella’s apartment. Stella’s brutish husband Stanley sees that Blanche is not what she appears to be and sets out to destroy her.
Scottish Ballet breathes new life into the classic tale, with graceful waltzes at the DuBois family home, electrifying jives in a Louisiana nightclub and intense duets in the caged heat of Stella and Stanley’s apartment.
scottishballet.co.uk
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53 Elm Row, Leith Walk, Edinburgh EH7 4AH www.packsend.co.uk/edinburgheast
Kidnapped – A Swashbuckling Rom-Com Adventure
Glasgow, Edinburgh, Inverness & Perth
Until May 6
This riotous re-telling of Robert Louis Stevenson’s adventure novella follows 19-year-old Davie, who, having never left home, heads off with nothing but a hand-drawn map and quickly realises that he has a lot of catching up to do, as he navigates murderous foes, Jacobite outlaws and the most inept crew of pirates this side of the Atlantic.
Jam-packed with 20th century pop music and 18th century romance and performed by a dynamic ensemble of actor-musicians, Kidnapped is a colourful coming of age story shot through with Stevenson’s trademark blend of poetry, humour and heart. nationaltheatrescotland.com
St Andrews
Apr 14-16
The festival’s second edition offers a foretaste of some of this year’s new films, many of them fresh from making waves at festivals such as Sundance and the Berlinale.
Films include: Klondike, Ukraine’s official entry to the 95th Academy Awards in the best International Feature Film category, which tells the story of a family living on the border of Russia and Ukraine whose lives are upended when they find themselves at the centre of an international air crash catastrophe in 2014; the documentary Calendar Girls, an unlikely coming of age story revolving around Florida’s most dedicated dance team for women over 60: and Monsters and Men about the
THREE YEARS AFTER we all learned what “lockdown” meant, much has returned to normal. Art galleries, theatres and concert halls are back in business, a bottle of hand sanitiser often the only clue to recent events.
Although the pandemic changed everyone’s lives for a time, few creatives are queueing up to explore the experience. And who could blame them? In the arts, as in other spheres, the focus is on moving forward.
But that is not the whole story. For those who lost loved ones or suffered long-term damage to their health, forgetting is impossible. The effects on NHS waiting lists will be felt for years to come and some businesses are still struggling to recover. The experience of lockdown still weighs heavily for many who want their stories to be heard. One of the few spaces where that can happen is art.
Artist and poet Alec Finlay has just completed the final phase of the multi-faceted project I
In a world which would rather forget the Covid-19 pandemic, artists are playing an important part in creating spaces to remember.
Susan Mansfield spoke to three of them.
Remember: Scotland’s Covid Memorial. People gathered at the Memorial Walk in Glasgow’s Pollok Park for a minute’s silence on March 23, the third anniversary of the first national lockdown. The project was commissioned by a partnership which included Greenspace Scotland and The Herald newspaper, which led a public fundraising campaign to meet the £250,000 budget.
Finlay, who himself suffers from long Covid, is a defiant voice on the subject of remembering. He says: “As much as some may want to push these events to the side, they’re not over. Two million people in the UK have long Covid. Some people are still shielding. Bereaved families are still grieving, and their grief is heightened by what feels like a lack of respect from politicians. The pressure to move on is part of that. This becomes a very political work simply by telling the truth.”
The Memorial Walk features 40 trees with wooden “supports”, sculptures inspired by human gestures of support, some of them modelled by the bereaved and those with long Covid. Each tree bears the words “I remember”
Covid Memorial
in one of the many languages spoken in Scotland, and QR codes enable walkers to listen to some of the memories submitted to the project, read by actor Robert Carlyle.
Hundreds of Covid memories, single sentences beginning with the words “I remember”, were collected from people of all ages and backgrounds, creating what might be the first social history of the pandemic. Some were recorded by Carlyle, others printed in a book. All have been stored electronically on the project website and at the National Library of Scotland. Submissions are still being accepted.
Finlay says: “I had worked on other projects relating to health, like the organ donor memorial, but this was on a different scale. I needed to find a way of working which was appropriate to that, which I did by integrating different art forms. Rather than making a single centrepiece, the idea from day one was to use the whole landscape, to make something very large out of some things which were very modest.”
“I said very early on, it has to be not just for
“
I said very early on, it has to be not just for the bereaved, but for everyone affectedPhoto: Hannah Laycock
the bereaved, but for everyone affected, including those grieving their health. One in eight people who had Covid has long Covid, and that’s not talked about. We’ve just had a leadership election in Scotland where Covid wasn’t talked about except as a historical event, which Sturgeon handled well. There is not a single long Covid clinic in Scotland. The lack of provision is a political story. I was excited to get the commission because I wanted to show people who had become disabled that we could still achieve things.”
Another group of people for whom forgetting is not an option are the NHS workers who were in the pandemic front line. In the summer of 2020, sculptor Kenny Hunter was commissioned to create a large scale work celebrating healthcare workers for the courtyard of the Royal College of Surgeons in Edinburgh. Your Next Breath, described as ‘a memorial to mark the containment of Covid-19 and the resilience of healthcare workers’, was unveiled last autumn and has been nominated for the Marsh Award
The sculpture is composed of four socially distanced figures at ground level, representing NHS workers at the end of a shift removing their masks and PPE. Hunter drew on interviews he conducted during the pandemic with surgeons working in intensive care units.
He explains: “The words that came up again and again were ‘reflection’, ‘resilience’, ‘exhaustion’ and ‘compassion’. That’s what I wanted to try to convey. Hopefully, each figure has got a bit of each of them. I wanted their humanity to be tangible. They’re all dressed in scrubs, so they could be surgeons, anaesthetists, junior doctors or auxiliary nurses. I didn’t want there to be individual roles or hierarchy.”
Hunter compared the context of the work to the war memorials of the last century. He continues: “Society tends to build monuments to people who gave their lives, and in a way this was a similar human experience. There was a
time when people didn’t understand what the virus was, how it spread. Their job was to walk into rooms with people with this disease, and a lot of them did get ill. It seems a tame beast now, but at the time it was a really scary situation.”
“A lot of people did their lockdown projects, built a shed, did their garden, had quite a nice war, but for other people it was hell on earth. People don’t want to think about it, and for most that’s okay, but it’s different for the people who gave so much. They went into the burning building and we went out the other way.”
Claudia Zeiske, former director of the community arts organisation Deveron Projects in Huntly and now a freelance curator and producer, spent the summer of 2022 collecting Covid experiences of ordinary people in Aberdeenshire. Funded by the Scottish Government via Greenspace Scotland, she devised Mountain to Sea, a 250-kilometre walk, meeting groups and individuals in each
town and village she visited.
With the aim of ‘walking the strapline of Aberdeenshire’ (the phrase used to promote the area to visitors), she started at Ben Macdui in the Cairngorms, following a meandering route to the coastal towns of Peterhead and Fraserburgh, and sat with people around her pink tablecloth embroidered with participants’ names (a tradition from her German family). Zeiske says: “By the time I arrived in Peterhead, I felt like I had walked the British class system.”
Her blog and film record a spectrum of experiences, from people who took up new hobbies and enjoyed walking and cycling in their local area to harrowing experiences of grief and hardship. In the coastal towns, many workers at fish factories on zero hours contracts were laid off with no access to furlough and had to rely on food banks to survive.
In Peterhead Prison, Zeiske heard from inmates about being locked in their cells 24/7 for ten
days if one person on their unit tested positive. She also met overseas workers on trawlers who became stranded in Scotland with no paperwork to come ashore, while she described the “electric” atmosphere in one sheltered housing complex where “anger, frustration and sadness” were still palpable. She says: “The people who are most affected are the elderly and the really young. I think the mental health pandemic will be longer and bigger than Covid.”
What she found everywhere was a hunger to share experiences. Some people talked for hours, and in one town people actually queued up to talk to her. She says: “Some things are so strange in life you almost can’t tell their stories later on, you have to do it at the time. If you don’t write these stories down, they will get lost somehow. If you don’t capture these stories, who will remember?” •
For more information about I Remember: Scotland’s Covid Memorial visit iremember.scot
For more information on Claudia Zeiske’s Mountain to Sea project visit claudiazeiske.com
All the featured makers are selected from the directory of Craft Scotland, the national development agency for contemporary craft and the go-to destination for anyone looking for beautiful, hand-made objects and who are passionate about supporting Scottish craftmakers. craftscotland.org/craft-directory
Jewellery designer Aubin Stewart creates vibrant collections with a strong focus on colour and composition. She often uses repurposed objects which are scavenged or collected or are off-cuts paired with delicate, precious elements. aubinjewellery.com
Printed textile artist and designer Joanna KinnerslyTaylor explores visual rhythms in her work to capture a particular moment, atmosphere or environment. She combines dyeing, painting and screenprinting on linen, developing bespoke colour palettes for each project. joannakinnerslytaylor.com
Mixing contemporary designs and traditional techniques, knitwear designer Fiona Ross takes inspiration from bright colours and geometric patterns to create her luxury Candy Coated Accessories, which complement each other perfectly. candy-coated.com
Known for his uncompromising stance on excellence, furniture designer and maker Daniel Lacey makes exquisitely hand-finished ‘furniture art’ pieces made to be used today and passed down for future generations to enjoy as heirloom pieces.
daniellacey.com
Ceramicist Tokes Sharif of Studio Brae hand-crafts sculptural, yet functional objects, using locally sourced, natural and sustainable materials wherever possible. Each piece is fashioned in small batches into iconic and timeless forms influenced by architecture and nature. studiobrae.com
Award-winning artist and jeweller Caitlin Hegney looks for rhythms and patterns which transcend ancient times, interpreting them for the present day. She uses handmade tools to translate her sketches into precious metals and handmixes pigments to dye wooden surfaces rich shades of blue. caitlinhegney.co.uk
ROM ITS EARLY DAYS AS A ROMAN SETTLEMENT, Lyon went on to become a leading printing centre in the Renaissance, an industrial and economic powerhouse through its silk and textile trade, a technical innovator thanks to the Lumiere brothers’ invention of cinematography and today hosts France’s leading art event, the Lyon Biennale.
The city’s oldest and most picturesque district, ‘Vieux Lyon’ (Old Lyon) has one of the largest collections of Renaissance architecture in Europe. Largely pedestrianised, it was the first site in France to be protected under the Malraux law, introduced by the then culture minister and novelist Andre Malraux, which granted taxdeductible status to the restoration of classified property.
A unique feature of Vieux Lyon are its ‘traboules’ (from the Latin ‘trans-mabulare’, meaning to pass through) – passageways and courtyards linking streets through buildings, much to the delight of visitors. The area is topped by the ‘Tour metallique’, a mini-Eiffel Tower which it predates by three years.
At the top end of the Presque’ile (Peninsula) district fringed by the Rhone and Saone rivers (they meet at the lower tip), the Museum of Fine Arts occupies the vast 17th century Royal Abbey of Our Ladies of Saint-Pierre. The finest provincial art museum in France, it stands on the Place des Terreaux, site of the Bartholdi fountain (designed by the same man behind the Statue of Liberty) and previously the site of the guillotine during the bloody French Revolution. To this day some locals refuse to cross the square in deference to ancestors who were victims of the Reign of Terror.
The museum’s seventy exhibition rooms house paintings, sculpture and decorative arts dating from antiquity (including the second largest collection of Egyptian artefacts in France after the Louvre) to the 20th century.
Pride of place goes to the largest collection of Impressionist works in France after the Musee d’Orsay in Paris, including works by Degas, Renoir, Monet, Sisley, Pissarro, Cezanne and Morisot. Other French masters include Moreau, Manet, Dufy, Boudin, Poussin, Ingres, Gauguin, Matisse and Daubigny, while their international counterparts range from Veronese, Rubens and Rembrandt to Chagall, Picasso and Bacon.
A whole room is dedicated to Louis Janmot’s 18-piece The Poem of the Soul, which took him 20 years to complete, while a splendid sculpture display includes works by Rodin, Bourdelle, Wouters, Maillol and others. The permanent displays are augmented throughout the year by themed exhibitions. mba-lyon.fr
Designed by the Italian architect Renzo Piano (Fondation Beyeler in Basel, Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas, Los Angeles City Museum of Art, etc.), the Musee d’Art Contemporain de Lyon, or Mac Lyon, is in the Cité Internationale, a huge office, retail and convention complex on the northern edge of the city near the Parc de la Tête d’Or (Golden Head Park), one of Europe’s largest urban parks.
Since 1984, when the first exhibitions took place, works have been especially created by living artists. At the time of its opening, the Lyon contemporary art scene lagged behind much of the rest of Europe and the decision was made not to try to catch up by acquiring existing works, but instead to develop its own collection. This now covers a variety of media, from painting, video, sculpture and sound works to photography, drawing, film and digital art. There are also a number of large scale installations. mac-lyon.com
Housed in a splendid Renaissance building in Vieux Lyon, the Maison des Avocats (Lawyers House), the Cinema and Miniature Museum is one of a kind in Europe, with two unique collections assembled by the artist Dan Ohlmann: over 450 pieces of movie memorabilia and objects relating to traditional special effects techniques such as modelmaking and stop motion techniques and 120 faithfully reproduced miniature dioramas of Lyon interiors and other familiar spaces on a 1/12th scale.
Procured from some of the biggest European and American film studios, the cinema section includes animatronics, masks, models, prosthetics, robots, costumes and creatures of all kinds. Clips show the making of films such as Vertigo, Ben Hur, Spiderman, Mrs Doubtfire, The 5th Element, Gremlins and many more.
If you’ve ever been curious to see a hand from Edward Scissorhands, Julie Andrews’ umbrella from Mary Poppins, the original costume from Batman Forever or a triceratops from Jurassic Park, this is the place. There are even complete sets from the movie Perfume, which were transferred from the Bavaria Studios in Munch and reassembled by the original set-builders.
The incredibly detailed miniatures include dinosaur skeletons in an imaginary natural history museum, an artist’s studio, a kitchen, a musician’s untidy flat, a metro carriage, a chapel, a grocer’s shop, an art gallery, a brasserie, a library, the Lyon opera house, a hospital ward and a prison. museeminiatureetcinema.fr
In the splendidly named Monplaisir district, the Institut Lumiere – or, specifically, a spot in the adjoining grounds – is known to fans
of film-making as the birthplace of cinema. In 1895 brothers Auguste and Louis Lumiere presented the world’s first paid public screening of short films using their new invention, the cinematographe, a three-in-one device which could record, develop and project motion pictures.
Of the ten 50-second films shown, “Workers leaving the factory” has gone down in history as the world’s first. It was shot opposite the gate to the Lyon factory their father had founded to produce photographic plates, and today visitors can stand on the very spot on Rue du Premier Film (First Film Street) where the camera was set up. The factory has since been demolished and today the site is occupied by a modern film theatre and a gallery for photography exhibitions.
The family’s Art Nouveau mansion, replete with mosaics, chandeliers, marble fireplaces and even ‘pere’ Antoine and his wife’s seemingly undisturbed bedroom, is now a museum dedicated to the history of film-making and photography. There is a wonderful scale model of the villa by the man behind the Cinema and Miniature Museum.
Ironically, the appropriately named brothers (‘lumiere’ is French for light) saw film as a novelty and had withdrawn from the film business by 1905, going on to develop their other major invention, the first photographic colour process. institut-lumiere.org
Overlooking Lyon is the Fourviere hill (site of the original Roman settlement of Lugdunum, birthplace of the Emperor Claudius), where the Notre Dame de Fourvière Basilica is an unmissable site. Its construction followed a promise made in 1870 by the people of Lyon to their archbishop to build a basilica dedicated to the Virgin Mary if the city was spared during the Franco-Prussian war.
An annual pilgrimage to the hill (known to locals as “la colline qui prie”, or “the hill that prays”) still takes place to thank the city’s patron saint, and the scene is represented on a magnificent stained glass window in the chapel dedicated to her. fourviere.org/en/discover/ notre-dame-de-fourviere/basilica-2
Elsewhere on the hill are the Lugdunum Museum and Roman Theatres. You can find yourself a seat in the amphitheatre, which seated over 10,000 spectators and is today the scene of a performing arts festival in summer, and the Odeon, which was dedicated to music and public readings and is now a museum with collections of mosaics, bronzes, scale models and everyday objects tracing the history of Lyon from prehistoric times to the early Christian period. Both are on UNESCO’s World Heritage List. lyon-france.com/je-decouvre-lyon/ culture-et-musees/musees/lugdunummusee-et-theatres-romains
Housed in a Renaissance building which was Lyon’s first town hall, the Museum of Printing and Graphic Communication traces the history of printing from Gutenberg’s 15th century letterpress printing process, which radically transformed the way knowledge was communicated, to the digital revolution. The museum has a leaflet of the Gutenberg Bible, the first book printed in Europe.
Lyon was once the European capital of printing, producing books in various languages.
Several streets are named after famous printers, and during WWII the city’s printers produced many Resistance pamphlets.
Exhibits range from one of the earliest printing presses to a 1990 Macintosh Classic computer, while displays explore the diversity of graphic design, from bus tickets and advertising posters to railway signs and record sleeves. imprimerie. lyon.fr/en/edito/presentation_musee
In the Villeurbanne suburb the Institute of Contemporary Art has one of the biggest public collections in France, with about 1,600 works by national and international artists such as Daniel Buren, Gerhard Richter and Jeff Wall as well as early career artists. Virtually all media are represented, and the building’s colourful exterior walls make it a local landmark.
The institute has four exhibition periods a year, with a new space created for every show. (Note to foodies: The IAC is just a few minutes’ walk from a Lyon institution – the Halles Paul Bocuse indoor market, which has been providing top notch fresh food since 1859.)
On the south edge of the Parc de la Tete d’Or, the Musee Guimet originally opened in 1879 to house the personal art collection of the industrialist and philanthropist Emile Guimet. It subsequently went through a variety of uses – a brasserie, a theatre, a skating rink and eventually the city’s Museum of Natural History – before standing empty for 15 years. Its reopening for the 2022 Lyon Biennale revealed an enormous, labyrinthine complex with a particularly aweinspiring central hall and it now hosts a variety of temporary exhibitions. guimet.fr
FURTHER INFO lyon-france.com •
More and more hotels are displaying distinctive art to help establish, emphasise or change their identity and differentiate them from others. The art collections they are creating to enhance their interiors are intended to engage a creative clientele. Ian Sclater recently visited some Los Angeles hotels which appeal to art-lovers.
MARILYN MONROE wallpaper, a gold monkey in a perspex case, a neon nude, er, eliminating neon stars? Or a wall installation of typewriters, an arty surfboard display or a plastic gnome giving the middle finger? It must be the CitizenM Downtown Los Angeles (the M stands for mobile), where the emphasis is on the playful, whimsical and irreverent.
Like all the hotels in the Amsterdam-based CitizenM group, this one does not take itself too seriously. The open plan ‘canteen’ and ‘living room’ (no formal restaurant or lounge here) encourage a casual atmosphere amid a riot of colour, shelves full of art books and alcoves laden with a phantasmagorical selection of objects.
CitizenM hotels have joined the ranks of some of the world’s top museums, such as New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, London’s Saatchi Gallery and Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum, on Smartify, an app for art-lovers which uses image recognition technology to identify artworks and provide information about them. A selection of pieces from CitizenM hotels worldwide can be discovered via the app, while the in-room iPad can take you on an art tour of the chain’s collection of over 400 original works.
citizenm.com
ALSO DOWNTOWN, the residentially inspired Hotel Per La occupies the former neoclassicalstyle Giannini Building, originally the headquarters of the Bank of Italy. (The 1920s banking hall is now the main dining area.)
The hotel has retained the building’s signature architectural and design features such as its Doric columns, inlaid plastered ceilings, the fully restored gold and blue Italianate ceiling (from which the hotel’s colour palette is drawn) and marble floors. The public spaces are grand, yet playful and every individual piece of furniture has been custom-made, although they look like they match exactly.
Many of the furnishings and decor were sourced from local LA artisans, including decorative wall lighting from Edition Modern, hand-painted pots by artist Jill Spector and hand-thrown ceiling lights by ceramist and lighting designer Neptune Glass.
The lobby features a custom-made curved plaster front desk by Katrien of Voila Studio inspired by linen fabric, while behind the front desk a hand-painted tapestry by LA muralist Jessalyn Brooks spread across five arches depicts flowing silhouettes.
Every room and suite has custom-designed furnishings, such as antique Persian rugs in saturated, vibrant colours, and a selection of vintage art pieces or original photographs and illustrations by commissioned artists drawn from a collection of over 4,000 pieces. hotelperla.com
IN ITS LANDMARK 1920s California Renaissance Revival building on the historic Broadway corridor, LA’s foremost concentration of Art Deco architecture and palace theatres, the Downtown LA Proper Hotel is a design destination in itself, with its gorgeous ‘Mexican modern’ interiors enhanced by touches of Spain, Portugal and Morocco, not least through the use by designer Kelly Wearstler of over 100 different kinds of hand-painted tiles throughout the property.
Formerly the private Cabrillo Club, which numbered Cecil B. DeMille among its members, the building, a designated Historic Landmark, has been reimagined through a modern lens, blending vintage elements with modern influences while preserving the spirit of Old Hollywood with a style Mr DeMille would have appreciated.
Mexican folk art-style paintings greet visitors in the lobby, where the walls and ceiling are enveloped in a mural by Abel Macias populated by stylised flora and fauna representative of Central and South America, a theme which is continued with Oaxaca hand-woven reed lampshades and Aztec motifs on the wall outside every guest room.
Residential in feel, each room and suite is appointed with vintage furniture and rugs and accented with hand-applied plaster detailing and a warm palette of charcoals and mauves.
There are site-specific murals and installations by local artists and artisans such as ceramicist Morgan Peck (reception desk, roof-top tables), Ben Madansky (the ceramic wall in the Pool Suite) and Judson Studios, whose stained glass adds sparkle to the public areas. LA’s longest established stained glass business, they have numbered Frank Lloyd Wright among their clients.
Bonus: The hotel is within walking distance of the Museum of Contemporary Art (MoCA) and the Broad, two of LA’s top art museums, and the Music Center and Walt Disney Concert Hall. properhotel.com/downtown-la
NEAR THE VIBRANT intersection of Melrose Avenue and Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood, the Kimpton La Peer has an engaging assortment of art, from graffiti pieces by Retna to a topographical installation of the city displayed behind the front desk, while the elevator walls are covered in floral murals by Japanese graphic artist and Apple collaborator Kahori Naki.
The La Peer also has its own artist in residence, James Peter Henry, who occupies a large studio where guests can watch him paint or take a class in everything from preparing canvases to mixing paints.
A native of Australia, James first became influenced by Aboriginal cave paintings. His work depicting an underwater kingdom of tropical fish on a coral reef was projected onto the Sydney Opera House for World Ocean Day in 2021 and Vogue magazine featured a dress he made for Art Basel Miami. He is represented by Winn Slavin Fine Art on ritzy Rodeo Drive. lapeerhotel.com
jamespeterhenry.com
TUCKED AWAY below the Sunset Strip, the Petit Ermitage is a boutique hideaway and an oasis of calm from the excitement of West Hollywood. The first thing you notice is the art, including a Dali here, a de Kooning there, a Miro, Erte or Rauschenberg elsewhere, not to mention the Tuscan-inspired detailing on the walls by muralist Marcus Suarez, the European antiques or hand-woven Turkish carpets. The owners’ collection of paintings and artefacts is displayed throughout the hotel, adding gallerylike gravitas to the guest corridors.
Eighty suites, of which no two are exactly alike, have been converted from luxury private residences, giving the hotel a home-like, ‘Boho chic’ feel.
Owner Stefan Ashkenazy is also a founder of the Bombay Beach Biennale, ‘the most radical art festival on the west coast’, which takes place in Bombay Beach on California’s Salton Sea (actually, a lake), the lowest community in the United States.
petitermitage.com
bombaybeachbiennale.com
OFTEN HOSTING MUSICIANS
performing at the nearby Music Center or Walt Disney Concert Hall, the Omni Los Angeles Hotel is adjacent to the Museum of Contemporary Art (MoCA) and down the street from the Broad, two of LA’s top art museums. The nearby landscaped urban park at California Plaza is surprisingly free of the city hubbub. If venturing Downtown from here, you may opt for an orange cabin on the Angels Flight, the narrow gauge funicular railway plying up and down Bunker Hill. omnihotels.com/hotels/los-angelescalifornia-plaza
This new biography sheds light on the Aberdeenshire-born artist who, after serving as the official war artist to the Egyptian Expeditionary Force in WWI (his portrait of T. E. Lawrence is in the Imperial War Museum collection) and enjoying commercial success between the two world wars, retreated to north Africa and relative obscurity. Never a joiner of the art establishment, McBey (1883-1959) led an adventurous, almost cinematic life, in the process gaining a reputation artistically as something of a modern Rembrandt, most esteemed for the now unfashionable art of etching. An exhibition of his work continues at the Aberdeen Art Gallery until May 28.
The Dutch-Croatian artist Sanja Marušic creates new worlds with her intriguing, vibrantly coloured self-portraits and desolate landscapes, whether influenced by her world travels or by using her own living room as a backdrop. Experimenting with shapes, colours and layers, she explores recurring themes such as escapism, the relationship between man and nature, motherhood and finding a balance in human relationships. Starting with photography, she uses a variety of analogue and digital techniques, sometimes changing the image in such a way that it seems as if we are looking at a painting.
Vermeer ed.
The official publication accompanying the largest Vermeer exhibition ever staged, currently running at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam (until Jun 4), immerses the reader in the immensely rich pictorial world of the master painter from Delft. All 37 works attributed to him, such as The Milkmaid and Girl with a Pearl Earring, are included and examined in extraordinary close-up detail. An international team of experts has conducted extensive research into the life and artistry of the 17th century artist which has yielded new insights into his social position, household, religious life, technique and the influence of his environment on his painting.
Over the past two decades contemporary African art has taken its rightful place on the world stage. Today, African artists work outside the confines of limiting categories and outdated perceptions, producing art which is as much a reflection of Africa’s tumultuous past as a vision of its limitless future. Published in collaboration with the Tate, this expansive and far-reaching overview features some of the most interesting and innovative artists working today, celebrating the diversity and dynamism of the contemporary art scene across the African continent.
For a chance to win a copy of the book, go to page 36.
How did you get started in the art world?
I worked in financial services, as a fund manager, for 31 years. I had been made redundant and wasn’t sure what I wanted to do next when I met Mark Ashley who was renovating the building on the waterfront at Newport where Tatha is now. He asked if I wanted to come and run the gallery with the artist Helen Glassford. We launched in 2014.
When did you fall in love with art?
I’ve always loved art. I come from Broughty Ferry and when I was a teenager going into Dundee with my friends, we would hang about the McManus Galleries. Museums and galleries have always fascinated me. When I worked in finance, I was lucky enough to be in an organisation that bought great pieces of Scottish art for their offices. I could see it made a difference.
How do you decide what to show in the gallery?
We have a stable of artists, and we do a mixture of solo and group shows, sometimes mixing in their work with new artists. What we will never do is put up the same kinds of work just because it’s safe. We always want to be exciting and new. Artists say Tatha is an
artists’ gallery. There’s got to be a degree of commerciality because you need to put the lights on, you need to survive, but we’re not frightened to put on a show that isn’t truly commercial just because we love the work.
What’s a normal day like?
We can spend 80 per cent of a day talking to people. We would never sacrifice time that connects with people. Every conversation is fun, even if someone doesn’t like the work. That means that things like social media, updating the website, planning, doing the accounts have to be done at other times.
What are the best parts of the job - and the worst?
My colleague Claire (Mackie) and I do everything in the gallery. We curate the shows, hang the pictures, when a show comes down, we repair the walls. There are bits, like Excel, or doing the accounts, which just have to be done. So just do it and get it right, make it easy because the good bits always outweigh the little bits that annoy you. Sometimes, we just sit here and feel immersed in amazing art.
What happened in lockdown?
When the first lockdown happened we were hanging a show. Nobody saw it! We did videos and walkarounds so people could see the show online and we worked hard to reach out to clients who were sitting at home just like we were. We did more through social media and connected with clients through phone calls and emails. And people found us on the internet, sometimes by chance. Now we have got a really nice international following.
How did the pandemic change the art world?
Access to artists is more readily available now through social media, so more people buy direct from the artist. On a positive note, it’s made the art world more open and people are more comfortable looking at art, but it’s also allowed all sorts of art to be sold through social media, good, bad and indifferent, and I think it has had a slight impact on galleries.
What advice would you give someone who’s buying art for the first time?
Trust your gut. You’ll know when a piece of work resonates with you. Stand in front of
the piece and think about how is it making you feel. Don’t match it to the curtains or the wallpaper, look at it in its entirety and spend time with it.
What’s the secret of running a successful gallery?
To love what you do. Make it fun and connect with people. The day I stop feeling passionate is the day I would stop.
What are you most proud of?
We met Norman Gilbert in 2018 when he was 91. He’d been painting for 60 years and had had limited success. His studio was an Aladdin’s cave of paintings. We invited him to have a show with us, and BBC Loop did a programme about him which went viral. He became an overnight sensation. We were able to get him the recognition, at last, that he so deserved.
Has a work of art ever changed your life?
About ten years ago, I went to Florence and saw Michelangelo’s David for the first time. It is at the end of a long room. I stood at the top, I couldn’t move, I couldn’t speak. I was absolutely blown away by the detail and the
size and everything about that piece of work. Sometimes I can’t comprehend how someone can create something so incredibly beautiful.
If you could have have a work of art from any art collection anywhere in the world…
I’d probably have a piece of David Hockney’s, because I’ve read about him, I like his stories, who he is. But tomorrow I’d probably take a Picasso. And then I might just want an Old Master as well. Do you think I could put David in the back garden?
What are you excited about?
Keeping doing what we’re doing. Producing eight amazing shows a year, finding new talent out there and bringing in artists who have been making work for 50 years who just live round the corner. Finding works which make this space come alive and being even more global than we already are.
Tatha is at 1 High Street, Newport-on-Tay, DD6 8AB. tathagallery.com •