Art Sunday, Scottish Seascapes
If
we are doing what we like best for me it has to be ‘Scottish
Seascapes’. I’ve included a couple of turner paintings here, I know he
is English, not Scottish but I included him because he did spend some
time here painting the coast and his work greatly influenced the
Scottish Seascape painters who came after him. Today there is no big
write up just a collection of Scottish Seascapes through the ages,
finishing with a whole album of work from a young female artist painting
in the islands today.
John Runciman, 1767,
King Lear in the storm
Alexander Nasmyth 1816,
A View of Tantallon Castle
The Rev John Thomson of Duddingston
Wolf's Crag, c 1820
Turner, 1842
Burial at Sea
Turner, Slaveship
And now a couple I have shown before
Mctaggart, 1890
The Storm
Joan Eardley
Early Flood Tide
Joan Eardley
The Sea
And a new painter Ruth Brownlee,
Gales on Brecon Beach
RUTH BROWNLEE
Ruth Brownlee is a young Artist who lives and works in the Shetland isles. The following is taken directly from her web site, I just love her work, to me it follows directly from Mctaggart and Eardly, hope you like it too.
Ruth Brownlee is a young Artist who lives and works in the Shetland isles. The following is taken directly from her web site, I just love her work, to me it follows directly from Mctaggart and Eardly, hope you like it too.
Ruth was born in 1972 in West Lothian. From 1990 - 1994 she attended Heriot Watt University/ Edinburgh
College of Art, graduating with a BA (Hons) in Drawing and Painting. In
1993 she was awarded theAndrew Grant Bequest Exchange to L'Ecole Des
Beaux Arts, Tours, France.
During her career she has won a number of awards including -The
Elizabeth Ballantyne Award at the S.A.A.C 5th Annual Exhibition, Royal
Scottish Academy, December 1994, 'Scotland's Year of the Artist Award'
Scottish Arts Council/ National Lottery Fund 2000 for
Artist-in-residence on board the SWAN and Finalist for The Gilchrist - Fisher Award 2002, for Young Landscape painters under 30 Ruth writes about her work:
"My
paintings are based on my experiences of living in the Shetland
environment and are concerned with capturing the atmosphere, the play of
light on the sea and coastal landscape, through mixed media. The skies
and seas of Shetland are now a constant inspiration.....I first came to
Shetland in 1998 when I was invited to do teaching in the isles. The
islands had such an effect on me - particularly the changing light and
open space - I decided to move to the isles and return to painting. It
took me nearly a year to be able to digest the wealth of the landscape
and begin to interpret Shetland and its seas as it was a completely
different environment to my home land in West Lothian.
I was and still am, taken by the constant changing elements -
particularly the drama of light upon the seas. The moods of weather
playing upon the land and mists on the moors provide continuing
inspiration.Since moving, I have also been introduced to sailing which
has again created a whole new relationship with the ocean. I've been
able to further develop my understanding of the seas and to capture the
completely different atmosphere of being 'at sea'
Jamie
Thomas wrote recently in Thee Shetland Post '...Ruth's work has a
distinctive slightly abstract style. Using a limited palette of deep
blues, whites, dark browns and greens, she creates a very intense
impression of scale and depth and a real feeling of power of the sea. The cold northern skies are reflected with equal intensity...'
See her work here
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butlerdidit2 wrote on Aug 24, '08
I really enjoyed the Ruth Brownlee paintings...love her colors. Thanks for sharing her work!
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forgetmenot525 wrote on Aug 24, '08
Thanks .............afraid that is a pretty poor copy of king Lear but it was the best i could find.
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greenwytch wrote on Aug 24, '08
beautiful - i am particularly drawn to the king lear and the one right below of the castle. very powerful! thanks, loretta.
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asolotraveler wrote on Aug 24, '08
lovely selections - makes me years for something OTHER THAN my landlocked middle state...oh yes, that's what vacations are for!
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