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In August 1982, during the Edinburgh International Festival, Edinburgh College of Art mounted an exhibition entitled On the Side of Life: Patrick Geddes 1854 - 1932, designed by John L. Paterson. [56] In 2000, a Patrick Geddes Heritage Trail was created on Edinburgh's Royal Mile by the Patrick Geddes Memorial Trust. [57]
Stewart Henbest Capper (15 December 1859 – 8 January 1925) was a prominent architect in the Arts and Crafts style closely associated with Sir Patrick Geddes with much of his work mislabelled as Geddes'.
In 1892 Duncan moved to Edinburgh to work with the sociologist, botanist and urbanist Patrick Geddes, whom he had met in Dundee. As part of the Celtic Revival movement, Duncan painted murals for Geddes's halls of residence at Ramsay Garden. He also became the principal artist for Geddes's 1895–1897 seasonal magazine The Evergreen. [1]
Geddes' work on Ramsay Garden began in the context of an urban renewal project that he had embarked on in Edinburgh’s Old Town.The area had fallen into disrepair, and Geddes hoped both to improve the living conditions of the working class, and to increase the number of wealthier residents.
Photorealist art, once dismissed as simplistic, gets reconsidered in a sprawling MOCA exhibition in downtown L.A. that includes the premiere of provocative work centered on the Kennedy assassination.
Paintings in the Buffalo AKG Art Museum (13 P, 2 F) C. Paintings in the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum (9 P) Paintings in the Calvet Museum (1 P)
Margaret Sarah Carpenter (née Geddes; 1793 – 13 November 1872) was an English painter. Noted in her time, she mostly painted portraits in the manner of Sir Thomas Lawrence . She was a close friend of Richard Parkes Bonington .
Geddes was born in 1887. [1] Her parents were Sir Patrick Geddes and Lady Anna Geddes née Morton, and had two brothers Alisdair (born 1891) and Arthur (born 1895). [2] Her childhood is described in The New Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women as "unconventional and peripatetic" and lacking conventional schooling. [2]