Showing posts with label Scottish artists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scottish artists. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 September 2012

£25,000 First Prize for Scottish Landscape Painting

Prizewinning landscapes in 2011
On Making A Mark later today, I'll be announcing the details of a major biennial art competition dedicated to painting the Scottish landscape.

The Jolomo Bank of Scotland Awards 2013 for Scottish Landscape Painting are due to be launched at the Scottish National Gallery in Edinburgh later this morning.

Total prize money of £35,000 is available - with £25,000 going to the winner of the First Prize.  A further £10,000 is available to the runners up - so it's a prize which is definitely worth entering by anybody who qualifies.

Before you get to excited, you need to know that the competition is only open to artists who currently living AND working in Scotland

The images on the right are of the paintings which won prizes in 2011

For some background about the prize - see my 2011 post on this blog Scottish Landscape Painting and a £25,000 prize which highlights 24 year old Edinburgh artist Calum McClure who was the 2011 competition winner.  He'd only just graduated from Edinburgh College of Art when he won the prize.

Calum said the impact had been life-changing.
“Winning the Jolomo Award has changed so much about my practice. I have been able to focus entirely on my work, whereas before I was doing 45 hours a week as a chef. It’s a huge opportunity and I feel very privileged to have won.

Along with the monetary side of the award, winning has also given me confidence in my work. The thought that the judging panel had seen something in the localised nature I try to bring to landscape depiction is fulfilling."
How to Enter

Landscape Painting: 2013 Jolomo Bank of Scotland Awards - Call for Entries is my detailed overview of the Call for Entries for the Jolomo Bank of Scotland Awards 2013 for Scottish Landscape Painting - posted on my main blog Making A Mark

Sunday, 17 July 2011

Scottish Landscape Painting and a £25,000 prize

The JOLOMO Bank of Scotland Award For Scottish Landscape Painting 2011 has been won by 24 year old Edinburgh artist Calum McClure.

The award is the largest privately funded Arts Award in the UK with prize money totalling £35,000.

The first prize in 2011 was raised to £25,000. The main sponsor is the Scottish artist John Lowrie Morrison OBE (Jolomo) who awarded the prizes at a dinner at the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum on 24th June 2011.  Other sponsors are the Bank of Scotland and The Scotsman.

Winning artist Calum McClure had this to say
I can’t believe I have won, this will make a real difference to my work. I graduated from Edinburgh College of Art in May 2010 and have continued to work as an artist since then. Among the focus of my landscapes are country houses and formal gardens. I paint these not only because of the interesting botanical specimens and the floral and fauna brought to the estates by their owners, but because it is a side of Scotland that is sometimes overlooked, due to our willingness to purport a skewed vernacular or kitsch version of ‘Scottishness’. The focus of my work for almost two years has been Cammo estate on the outskirts of Edinburgh, in particular its boating pond.
Seven Scottish artists reached the shortlist.  Their names are below plus the part of Scotland they live/work in.

Unfortunately the website does not have good digital images of either the winning work or the work of the shortlisted artists - with annotations for dimensions and media.  You can see something of the works shortlisted in this slideshow - but this is not the standard of presentation which I find on other art competition websites.  However what it does do is give you a better sense of the size and impact of the work when hung in a gallery.

You might like to take a look at the websites of the shortlisted artists which you can find links to below.

Aberdeenshire - Susie Lee (45) - slides 2, 20 and 21 in the slideshow

Suzie Lee website
“The Scottish landscape provides me with the perfect inspiration for my work. Sketches are made on site finding a feeling of place the intention being a poetic visual statement suggesting that a loss of intimacy with the natural world is in itself a loss of self.”
Susie Lee

Borders - David Cass (22) - slides 7, 28-30 in the slideshow

David Cass website
“I’ve always collected old wooden objects, from antique shops and markets; initially, I used these materials to construct wall-based sculptures.  However these found-objects have gradually developed a new purpose: and are now the surfaces on which I paint.”
David Cass

Edinburgh - Calum McClure (24) - slides 4, 22 and 23 in the slideshow

Calum McClure at The Scottish Gallery
“Among the focus of my landscapes are country houses and formal gardens. I paint these not only because of the interesting botanical specimens and the floral and fauna brought to the estates by their owners, but because it is a side of Scotland that is sometimes overlooked.”
Calum McClure
Edinburgh - Jenny Mason (46) - slides 24 and 25 in the slideshow

Jenny Mason website
“There is something reassuring to us as humans in the endless movement of clouds in the sky and the relentlessness of the sea, it is never the same, never boring, and its takes one's attention off the cerebral and onto the visual wonderment of the world we inhabit.”
Jenny Mason
Edinburgh - Allan Robertson (56) - slides 5, 16 and 17 in the slideshow

Allan J Robertson website
“The structures that form our industrial and manufacturing past are often hidden from sight. My aim is to capture their colours, textures and materials, the environment they sit in, to create an idealised landscape that once again makes these structures predominant.”
Allan Robertson
Edinburgh - Beth Robertson Fiddes (38)  - who won second prize (£6,000) - slides 3, 18 and 19 in the slideshow

Beth Robertson Fiddes website
“I work on large land and seascapes reflecting on themes of memory, solitude and scale, while smaller works study unusual rock formations shaped by the tides or mountain rivers and waterfalls.”
Beth Robertson Fiddes
Glasgow -  Katie Pope (26) - who third prize (£4,000) - slides 1, 26 and 27 in the slideshow

Katie Pope website
“Being located in the heart of Glasgow provides an appropriate setting, as my work is strongly rooted in reflecting life and landscape here in the West of Scotland. I hope my work reflects something of the vitality of my surroundings.”
Katie Pope
Artist John Lowrie Morrison OBE (Jolomo), who presented the prizes, said 
It was an extremely difficult job to choose not only the shortlisted artists but the three final winners of awards.  However the quality of all the work shows that landscape painting is alive and well in Scotland, although maybe not in all the Art Schools!


The winners show the best of that painting – Katie Pope’s wonderfully expressive Glasgow urban landscapes, Beth Robertson Fiddes’ primeval shorelines and Award winner Calum McClures’s beautifully intricate Wyethesque recording of garden landscape.  All the shortlisted artists’ work this year was simply stunning – however the three winners were just that bit special.
Criteria for Entry - and How to Enter

It's obviously too late for this year - but for the future reference of Scottish artists and readers of this blog the criteria for entry are as follows. 
Applicants must be painters who:

a. are currently living and working in Scotland and are aged 18 or over on 1st January 2011.

b. have studied, or are studying, at a college of art or in an art discipline at a university, further education college or independent art college.

c. Should more than five years have passed since studying, or if the applicant has no formal qualification, the body of work submitted must be proposed and approved by a suitably qualified referee, e.g. art lecturer, teacher, gallery owner.

d. The Jolomo Bank of Scotland Awards welcomes entries from artists with special needs.

e. There will be a main prize of £25,000 with an additional £10,000 divided among the runners up.
It seems to me that criteria (c) is probably a rather useful one in terms of winnowing down the scope for people entering who are way short of the standard required.  It's very nice to see an exhibition which doesn't have generation of entry fees as one of its main aims and performance indicators!

Applications to enter should be made by way of 
one central, titled image which should be a painting and between five and ten supporting images which may be paintings, sketches or drawings. All entries should be accompanied by title, metric size, the medium used and the year the work was made. Also included should be the entrant's full Curriculum Vitae.
All entries are viewed anonymously by the judging panel of six people.

Thursday, 11 November 2010

Arthur Melville's watercolour landscapes

One of the joys of visiting Pioneering Painters: The Glasgow Boys 1880-1900 exhibition when it opened at the Royal Academy of Arts recently was encountering watercolour landscapes by Arthur Melville for the first time.  They are absolutely stunning!  If you are a watercolourist, it's worth going to the exhibition just to stand and stare and absorb what Melville does.

Below is one example - but there are others.

Brig o'Turk, 1893 by Arthur Melville
Watercolour, 60.8 x 86.4 cm

The Robertson Collection, Orkney
Photo The Robertson Collection, Orkney
It looks as if Bruce MacEvoy (Handprint) is also a fan as he's researched Melville and has some information about him on his Handprint site.
Melville's technique (as described by his friend Theodore Roussel) is worth describing: he began by soaking the paper in a bath of diluted chinese white until it was thoroughly impregnated with the color, then let the paper completely dry. He then rewetted the surface, and dropped in pure browns, reds and blues to build the shapes, painting with diffuse blobs of color rather than touches of the brush. Once the values and basic forms were blocked out in this way, Melville gradually intervened with more directed brushstrokes as the paper dried, helping to define forms and figures to produce the final somber, atmospheric effect.
I was so impressedwith Melville that I bought a book about him (Arthur Melville  by Iain Gale ) - in part prompted by yet another stunning landscape on the cover!  His watercolour paintings of Spain - whihc he visited every year from 1890 ubntil his death - and the Mediterranean are amazing.

In truth Melville was never a Glasgow boy proper.  He was older than most of them but did share a kindred spirit.  He'a also been called the Scottish Impressionist - but that's not quite right either.

Between 1890 and 1893 his work transformed.  Gale hypotheses that there was a connection between Melville and the Nabis (Pierre Bonnard, Edouard Vuillard and Maurice Denis became the best known of the group).  This seems to be on the basis that both seemed to have arrived at the same conclusion about how to paint at about the same time - using strong flat areas of colour combined with strong outlines and an element of pattern and decoration.  Melville uses a planar technique and blocks of colour in his watercolours.

Gale suggests that the landscapes he painted in 1893 at Brig o'Turk in the Trossachs should be seen as arrangements in pattern and harmony.  (Brig o'Turk is of course where Millais painted Ruskin's portrait and got to know his wife rather well!)

I'm guessing the reason I feel him appealing is that in reading about his approach in the Gale book,  I can find a lot of resonance with the way I tend to think about landscapes and to draw them.  However I'm nowhere as bold as he is - but it now makes me want to develop confidence in working more in this way since I find it so attractive.

Pioneering Painters: The Glasgow Boys 1880 – 1900 is an exhibition from Glasgow Museums in association with the Royal Academy of Arts.   It is on display in the Sackler Galleries at the Royal Academy of Arts, London until 23 January 2011.