It has an ISBN, but this was no help to my usually excellent local bookshop who could not trace it. Nor is it available from that well known on- line retailer which doesn't like to pay UK taxes...... So, I had to contact the staff at the Pier who could not have been more helpful when I called. The website was misbehaving.( But try this link now if you want a copy). They took my details over the phone and I had the book in just over 48 hours. Pretty good- and friendly service!
So, how did I know about his artist who lived and worked mostly, no further south than Aberdeen.
Well, she did have an exhibition in Alnwick when I was very young- at the the then relatively new Bondgate Gallery. I still have the brochure, you can see it with my review of the last Edinburgh show here. The prices now appear extraordinarily modest. But of course would have represented several weeks pay for the average worker.
Sylvia Wishart had much encouragement from her art teacher Ian MacInnes who happened to be a fine painter himself ( and it seems a well known local character). She did eventually apply to to study art in Aberdeen and it was at Gray's that she was to work for most of her teaching career. Her early work includes two relatively academic male nudes-very well observed and unusually succesful for their date. One interior has a kind of slightly French look to it. It is again a highly competent not to stay confident exercise. You can see why her tutors were impressed.
But then came the illustrations for An Orkney Tapestry by George Mackay Brown which to me were of equal interest to the text itself. These show the fastidious and delicate way in which she develops the airy structure of her drawing. Formally, as compositions, these are, like all her work extremely satisfying, and the nicely judged degree of abstraction and the clarity of structure make excellent illustrations for that book.They entirely lack the common expressionist side of Scottish art.
Gooding is right to emphasise the importance of these works. In his words they have
" an uncanny stasis". And again he says that they are "a calendar of love for Orkney. That many resulted from enlightened sponsorship by a well known local agricultural firm who did indeed want illustrations for their calendar is in some ways neither here nor there. But in another it is charming and appropriate.These subtle constructions show a real poetry of landscape and organisation . They are so quiet that you might think a breath of air could blow them away. They focus on farm structures and to some degree the setting is only hinted at. They are if I may say so, entirely unique and I sometimes think they are the best of her work before the large late paintings . At times they have a simplicity which the Rembrandt of the landscape drawings-or many Japanese artists would understand. It is the art of leaving out. She likes fence posts, barbed wire and stone walls, habour walls also -these she might have said, "are things which made me a painter", these and so much else.
The Double Houses Stromness: from An Orkney Tapestry |
Gooding compares Wishart's work with that of several other women artists-all of an older generation and none to my knowledge Scottish.He is quite clear that Wishart knew their work and her sense of design is quite justifiably compared with that of Prunella Clough-which is a high compliment.
He isn't suggesting that there is a special feminine sensibility- but illustrates their work for the good reason that they have relevance for Wishart's art. Morandi and Robert Medley after all have made paintings in which the range of coloured greys is narrow.Mary Potter is mentioned as an artist working with closely related tones in a high key. She, incidentally, had a word of advice for exhibition hangers-don't put a light toned work next to another.
Crawnest and the Craig Gate: Rackwick |
Rackwick as photographed by Meyer of Stromness |
" Starting in the central area...I will let the picture "grow" in all directions until a decision is made where to stop the image."
This is where Gooding brings in Bachelard with reference to the interior/ exterior views which combine in these last works.The artist obviously lived in the most wonderful landscape and the view from her cottage makes one envious. Everything a landscape artist could want just outside your window! Cliffs and sky: lots of dramatic weather no doubt. And these which came from that home are some of her finest work.She achieves a fluid, dream like painting. The work is full of incident as the screens meld, interlock, dissolve. Its a bit like a double exposure in photography.
Reflection 1 |
Sylvia Wishart: A Study:Pier Arts Centre, 2012. ISBN 978-0-95311131-0-1
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