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John Phillip (19 April 1817 – 27 February 1867) was a Scottish painter best known for his portrayals of Spanish life. He started painting these studies after a trip to Spain in 1851. He started painting these studies after a trip to Spain in 1851.
Low exhibited with The Society of Scottish Independent Artists, the Royal Glasgow Institute, and the New Art Club founded by J.D. Fergusson and Margaret Morris. [1] In 1956 Low co-organised Glasgow's first open air exhibition, on the railings of the Botanical Gardens. It was reported in The Scotsman as "The Left Bank come to the Kelvin". The ...
Hugh William Williams, View of Thebes (1819) Williams was active from the early 1790s with his earliest recorded work dated 1792. Printmaking went hand in hand with his work in watercolour and Pasquale Garof (b.1774), a carver, gilder and printseller (and another native of Como who arrived in Edinburgh in 1790), published a suite of Hugh's Etchings of Local Subjects – intended to assist in ...
Alexander George Fraser (1786–1865) was a Scottish genre and domestic painter who exhibited his paintings at the Royal Academy in London for many years. [1] His son, Alexander Fraser (1827-1899), was also a prominent artist with whom he is sometimes confused (and his paintings are sometimes misidentified as being by his son).
portrait painting David Martin (1 April 1737 – 30 December 1797) was a Scottish painter and engraver. Born in Fife , he studied in Italy and England, before gaining a reputation as a portrait painter.
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Self portrait of George Jamesone, 1642 Rare example of pre-Reformation stained glass in the Magdalen Chapel, Edinburgh. Art in early modern Scotland includes all forms of artistic production within the modern borders of Scotland, between the adoption of the Renaissance in the early sixteenth century to the beginnings of the Enlightenment in the mid-eighteenth century.
Johnstone was born in Edinburgh in 1892 and grew up in Napier Road, near the Gothic Mansion, Rockville. [1] Her father, landscape artist George Whitton Johnstone RSA (1849–1901), [2] encouraged her artistic talents, and at the age of 16 she enrolled as a student at the Edinburgh College of Art.