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The Royal Scottish Academy

 

199th Annual Exhibition, Edinburgh

 

3rd May - 8th June 2025

Cobalt and Mimosa, The Days Grow Longer

Acrylic on Paper

 

Scottish Landscape Awards 2025

 

Kirkcudbright Galleries

 

5th July - 28th September

The Snowbreak

Oil on Canvas

 

 

'Life is a Strange Place'

Solo Exhibition, Compass

 Gallery Glasgow

12th October - 31st October 2024

 

A Man Feeling Anxious in the Presence of a Beautiful Woman

42 x 44 cm, oil on oil paper

 

 

Left at the Mountain North to the Sea

Highland Landscape, Inverness Museum and Art Gallery

 

 

The Way of the Righteous, oil on canvas, 110cm x 90cm

Painted during the lockdowns when we were all waiting for a way out.

The work comes from the myths and legends of the far north and the stories I have heard from the neighbouring farmers who have worked the land for generations.  Also the land itself.  In Gaelic and Celtic folklore, everyone born has a guiding spirit – always an animal (as strong as a horse, cho seolta ri sionnach).  These animal guides came from heaven and were said to take the colours of heaven.  Here the guides follow the legendary drovers' paths through the vast Flow Country of Caithness and Sutherland. The name Flow Country comes from the Norse “Watter lands”.  Wet, dangerous boggy moorland.  The tracks were followed by the drovers taking their animals on the treacherous journey from the North coast to the markets in Dingwall and Falkirk.  When the many tracks come together the drovers called the final path ‘The Way of the Righteous’.

These bright coloured animals of heaven were said to have to pass through many perilous situations but here the dangerous part of their journey is over and they have found the righteous path towards the new beings they will help through life.

 

 

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