Iona Landscape: Rocks (1925-37)
by Samuel John Peploe
Oil on canvas, Size 40.90 x 46.00 cm
National Galleries of Scotland
by Samuel John Peploe
Oil on canvas, Size 40.90 x 46.00 cm
National Galleries of Scotland
- Michael Palin - the man who highlighted the work of Vilhelm Hammershoi and triggered an exhibition at the Royal Academy of Art - provided an overview of the lives and works of the Scottish Colourists. (For UK readers it's repeated on BBC4 on Saturday and I need to remember to try and have the record button working this time! It seems that you can't see it BBC iplayer and this might be to do with the fact that it's a documentary originally made in 2000.
Michael Palin explores the lives and paintings of four Scottish artists known as the Colourists: John Duncan Fergusson, George Leslie Hunter, Samuel John Peploe and Francis Campbell Boileau Cadell.
Their works hang in 10 Downing Street, but in their own lifetimes their vibrant vision shocked the critics.
- Peter Capaldi then provided a rapid overview of prominent Scottish artists in A Portrait of Scotland (available to see again on BBC iplayer)
Peter Capaldi explores the story of Scotland's art. He had a talent for drawing and a love for art that took him to art school in Glasgow, but soon after graduating he became an actor.This post and the one tomorrow (about the artists identified in the Capaldi programme) are going to be by way of a list. I've been intending to get round to researching the Scottish Colourists, the Glasgow Boys and various other artists for some time and these posts will be a handy aide memoire of links - and notes I made while watching the two programmes!
Capaldi spends time with the paintings and the artists that have made Scottish art special. He sketches some of the most important Scottish portraits, and by focusing on the tradition of portraiture that goes back 500 years, Capaldi shows how Scotland's art has reflected the changing face of the nation.
Hopefully some of you will also enjoy travelling through the art of Scotland courtesy of the hyperlinks.
The Scottish Colourists
Though the Colourists were entirely serious painters, their work is not complicated. It carries no hidden agenda. What you see is what you get.I've found some articles which seem to be asociated with when this documentary or a remarkably similar one which date back to 2000.
Michael Palin
- Why I love the local colour is an article in the Times by Michael Palin - dating back to 2000 - which is also about the Scottish Colourists. Slightly tongue in cheek it suggests it's about why they taught Michael Palin to look on the bright side of life! ;) Shades of Monty P!
- Palin looks on the brighter side of a maligned Scottish art movement Sunday Herald, The, Oct 8, 2000 by Anna Burnside
- Picture perfect Scotsman (Edinburgh, Scotland), The, Oct 7, 2000
Group of four Scottish artists, Cadell, Fergusson, Hunter, Peploe who were among the first to introduce the intense colour of the French Fauve movement into Britain
Tate Glossary - Scottish colourists
The four painters became known as the Scottish Colourists because they grafted their knowledge of contemporary French Art – Monet, Matisse, and Cezanne - onto the painterly traditions of Scotland, redefining the qualities of light and colour in their still life, landscapes, figurative paintings and drawings into their own singular styles.
Explore Art - Scottish Colourists
- The Portland Gallery specialises in the Scottish Colourists
- Portland Gallery - JD Fergusson/ Archive / Biography
- Wikipedia: John Duncan Fergusson
- works in the National Galleries of Scotland
- Gracefield Permanent Collection - Explore Art - JD Ferguson
Samuel John Peploe
I really like Peploe's work - he's the reason I first got interested in the Scottish Colourists
Francis "Bunty" Campbell Boileau Cadell
- The Portland Gallery - FCB Cadell / Archive / Biography
- Wikipedia: Francis Campbell Boileau Cadell
- works in the National Galleries of Scotland
- Gracefield Permanent Collection - Explore Art - Francis Campbell Boileau CADELL 1883 -1937
Comprised of four artists, Samuel John Peploe, Francis Campbell Boileau Cadell, George Leslie Hunter and John Duncan Fergusson, the Scottish Colourists were among the most forward-thinking British artists of the twentieth century, combining a knowledge of contemporary French art with the painterly traditions of Scotland. Widely recognised as the finest collection of Scottish art in private hands, this is the first showing of The Fleming Collection in the South of England.The exhibition continues until November 1st.
I like the Scottish colourists - and their legacy is still very strong in a lot of contemporary Scottish work.
ReplyDeleteI also like some of William Gillies (dont think I've spelt that right - it's been a long day teaching!) the next generation down from them.
I hadn't noticed these programmes and so was put out at missing them. However, I've done a little digging and the Peter Capaldi programme is being repeated Thursday night at 12.40 (really 0:40 Friday Morning. The Michael Palin programme is on again at 7:00 on Saturday evening
ReplyDeleteThanks for all of the wonderful extensive references to education oneself about this group. I have always loved the Fauves, post-impressionists and German Expressionists. This was a group new to me with whom to fall in love/revel in looking at. I am especially enjoying looking at the Cadell.
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