Land & Sea

Our second exhibition in our new gallery space in Gullane is a small group show with six artist with very different styles who are constantly inspired by the changing landscape around them.

Matthew Draper SSA VAS PS, Michael Durning RSW PPAI PAI, Neil Macdonald RSW RGI PAI, Sandy Murphy RSW RGI PAI, Jacqueline Orr RSW RGI PAI and Robert D Murray RSW RGI PAI.

We will also have some new driftwood and found items from Shaun McLaren.

Images will be added to the website as they become available.

The exhibition opens on Saturday 30th June and runs until Sunday 29th July.

New Beginnings

Our first exhibition in our new premises in Gullane will be a Mixed Exhibition featuring new work by a variety of gallery artists including Matthew Draper, Ann Oram, Simon Laurie, Graeme Wilcox, Alan Connell, George Birrell, Neil Macdonald, Alice McMurrough, Astrid Trügg, Dominique Cameron, Andy Heald, Jayne Stokes and many more. We will also be showing for the first time work by Gail Murray RSW PAI, Robert Murray RGI RSW PAI and Kirsty Cohen. A really great line up for our first show.

We will open the doors on Saturday 26 May from 12-5pm and would be delighted if you could join us to celebrate our opening.

Going forward our new opening hours will be: 11am-5pm Tuesday to Saturday, 12-5pm Sunday and Closed Mondays except Bank Holidays.

Hope to see you soon.

Borders Art Fair 2018

Springwood Park
Kelso
TD5 8LS

16-18 March
10-4pm Free Entry

Come and join us for a fabulous 3 days, celebrating visual arts in the beautiful Scottish Borders.

Live art demonstrations, over 50 exhibiting artist stands, creative talks and discussions, our ‘local heroes’ exhibition, competitions, food and drink and, a whole lot of fun for all ages!

We’ll be on Stand 33 and will have a range of great work on show including; Claire Beattie, George Birrell, Davy Brown, Dominique Cameron, Matthew Draper, George Gilbert, Simon Laurie, Ann Oram, Arran Ross, Gordon M Scott & Astrid Trugg.

Hope to see you there.

Spring 2018 Mixed Exhibition

Our second exhibition of 2018 is a Mixed Show featuring the work of some of the most well known Scottish artists from the past 100 years.

We have recently acquired a few interesting pieces by the highly respected Scottish artist, Patrick William Adam RSA (1854-1929) who lived next door to the gallery at Ardilea from 1908 until his death in 1929. He is most well known for his Interior paintings many of which were painted in houses in and around North Berwick, including Ardilea, Hyndford, Clerkington House and Smeaton Hepburn House. He was one of the founding members of “The Society of Eight”, a group of like-minded artists who got together to exhibit their work in Edinburgh. It seems that their common purpose was to bridge political and artistic differences that existed at the time between Glasgow and Edinburgh. Other members include Cadell, Lavery, David Alison, James Cadenhead, Harrington Mann, James Paterson & another artist whose work we will have on show, Alexander Garden Sinclair. Later members to this group were Peploe, Guthrie, MacTaggart & William Gillies.

Three pieces will be on show, a beautiful oil, “Sweet William, Geraniums” dated 1929, an atmospheric pastel drawing “Flash on the Bass, North Berwick” dated 1925 (or possibly 1929) and for those interested in North Berwick in days gone by, a watercolour featuring beached boats by the first tee at North Berwick Golf Course dated 1899.

Alongside these three pieces with local interest we will also have beautiful landscape by John Campbell Mitchell RSA (1862-1922) of North Berwick looking back from Daisy Island (or “The Leithies”) as well as work by Ian Fleming RSA RSW (1906-1994), Henry Wright Kerr RSA RSW (1857-1936), James McBey (1833-1959), John Bulloch Souter (1890-1972), William James Laidlaw Baillie CBE PRSA PPRSW RGI HRA (1923-2011) and John Bellany CBE RA HRSA (1942-2013) amongst others.

Of our contemporary artists we will have new work by the popular gallery artists Matthew Draper, Andy Heald, Allan J Robertson and Thomas Cameron.

We will also be introducing a new artist to the gallery, Leonie MacMillan. A graduate of Glasgow University and Duncan of Jordanstone as well as spending two summers apprenticeship under the tutelage of the well known ceramist, Lotte Glob, Leonie’s work combines abstract design with messages about the world in which we live.

The show will kick off with refreshments on Saturday 2nd March from 2-5pm and will continue until the end of April. We hope you can join us.

John Johnstone – Visual Diaries

Our first exhibition in 2018 is a solo show with one of Scotland’s leading figurative artists, John Johnstone. Born in Forfar in 1941, John studied at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art from 1959 to 1964 under David McClure and Alberto Morrocco. He later returned to
teach life drawing classes to a generation of artists such as Joseph Urie, Ian Hughes and Michael McVeigh who have gone on to forge their own successful careers.

His early work was influenced heavily by the work of artists such as Soutine and Kokoschka. When John combined these influences with his fascination for the human figure, a distinctive and powerful style emerged. This work was concerned with death, social injustice and inhumanity in complete contrast to the fashionable styles encouraged at the time. Two of these early pieces are in the current show and mark a strong contrast to the more light-hearted caricature paintings that he is well known for today.

Following art college, John had a number of critically acclaimed exhibitions in Dundee and London. His first show at the Alwin Gallery in Mayfair in 1966 contained work from his Post-Dip show, “full of anguish, suffering and a desperate acceptance of the absurd”, wrote Conroy Maddox the English surrealist artist in the Art Review. His second show, again at the Alwin Gallery, a year later, drew the attention of the London based writer for the The Scotsman, Robert Macdonald, wrote “The paintings in his first show had a nightmarish violence about them that was disturbing, but the expressionism is now becoming more coherent and controlled and his work is gaining painterly qualities which make it evident that he is an artist to be watched.”

At this promising part of his career John seemed to lose his way. In a letter he wrote “My seven years as an angry young man are over.” – he found it increasingly difficult to paint in this disturbing, expressionistic style.

However, a retrospective exhibition at the Tate of work by Edward Burra proved revelatory and provided John with the inspiration to forge forward with his painting once again. Now more controlled and less expressionistic, John’s work became more illustrative allowing him to add more detail to his work.

Around this time the printmakers workshop started up in Dundee. Being an insatiable drawer, John found etching to be the perfect medium to accommodate his imaginative narrative and fantastical caricatures. These etchings remain an important and popular part of his work today. We have a number of new and older etchings in this show.

John’s work has continued to be more illustrative, indeed he admitted that he probably should have followed a career as an illustrator as his real love has always been drawing. His drawing skills are evident in all the work on show in this exhibition from the beautiful line in the unusual “Conjoined Twins” from 1965 and the busy fantastical etching “Dream City” to the keenly observed visit to a modern art exhibition in “Shark Tank”.

Expert draughtsmanship, wonderful observation, a good dose of humour and an unremitting desire to create; John Johnstone is an artist to be admired.

The exhibition kicks off with an opening on Saturday 3rd February from 2-5pm where you can meet the artist and runs until the 25th February.

Most of the information on John’s career I found in the book, “John Johnstone” written by his brother Bob Johnstone with an introduction from the art critic Edward Lucie Smith, is also available during the exhibition.

Twelve x Two, 12 Artists x 2 Paintings

Next up at Fidra Fine Art is our mixed Winter Exhibition; “12 x 2”, 12 Artists x 2 Paintings. It features a great variety of work by some of the best contemporary Scottish artists working today. We are delighted to have received a really strong selection of work covering an interesting variety of styles and subjects… Im sure there will be something here to suit most tastes.
Lesley Banks, George Birrell, Dominique Cameron, Alan Connell, Matthew Draper, George Gilbert RSW, John Johnstone, Simon Laurie RSW RGI, Neil Macdonald RSW RGI PAI, Alice McMurrough RSW RGI PAI, Ann Oram RSW & Angela Repping.

We have also lined up a visit from the very popular jeweller, Kathryn Williamson. Kathryn will be here with her lovely jewels on Saturday 16th December from 12 noon.

Our Winter Exhibition starts on Saturday 2nd December and will continue through to 28 January 2018.

Holger Mohaupt, “I See What You Like”

Our next exhibition at Fidra Fine Art features the smartphone photographic work of German artist, Holger Mohaupt. Set in our everyday landscape, Holger’s cleverly observed narratives elevate commonplace experiences into engaging stories. His work invigorates a sometimes austere world thoughtfully and aesthetically.

The title of the exhibition “I See What You Like” is a playful hint at the curation of the show. All the images on display are “likes” from the artist’s Facebook page, which he has been regularly feeding with his distinct imagery of his every day experiences for the past five years – social media acting as a new form of participatory curation.

To contrast with Holger’s handprinted digital photographs is a small series of portrait etchings by the Aberdeen artist John Bulloch Souter (1890-1972). These pieces, created around one hundred years ago using a process more laborious than the relatively instantaneous digital techniques of today, invites the viewer to consider the changes in aesthetics, processes and how art is consumed and enjoyed today.

A third strand to this exhibition is a video installation titled, ‘Private View’ which is hosted in the St Andrew Blackadder Parish Church on the High Street in North Berwick. Here Holger again is engaging in a dialogue, this time with memory and landscape. The video projection in the main hall of the church was inspired by the memorial benches in and around the seaside town in East Lothian. The peace and tranquility of the church invites the visitor to contemplate and reflect beyond the every day.

Holger describes this work as, “…a call for dialogue. A dialogue between personal landscapes and the psychogeography of the everyday, with his smartphone as a walking stick.”

“I See What You Like” at Fidra Fine Art, will open with a Preview on Friday 27th October from 6-8pm and will continue Saturdays and Sundays open 12-5pm until 16 November. Midweek appointments are very welcome.

“Private View” video installation at St Andrew Blackadder Parish Church will run from 28 October to 26 November open Monday to Friday 9am-2pm and Saturdays 10am-2pm.

Mixed Exhibition – September 2017

Our next exhibition is a Mixed Show and will feature a great selection of work by some of the best Scottish artists, both working today and from the past 100 years or so.

We are looking forward to showing some great new work by Graeme Wilcox, Michael Durning, Sandy Murphy, Euan McGregor, Jimmy Cosgrove, Matthew Draper, Astrid Trügg, Dominique Cameron, Andy Heald, Arran Ross, Allan J Robertson, Jayne Stokes, Patti Yuill, Fee Dickson, Georgina Bown as well as older pieces by great Scottish artists such as Robert Russell MacNee, William Walcot, Patrick William Adam, John Bellany and many more.

We will also be introducing the work of two new artists to the gallery, Colin Brown and Ann Cowan. Both artists use collage in their work creating an interesting build up of textures and patterns but with very different results.

We will kick off with an opening evening with refreshments on Friday 15 September from 6-8pm…hope to see you there.

Dominique Cameron – Leith Walks

Next up at Fidra Fine Art is a solo exhibition of work by the incredibly talented Dominique Cameron. Following on from successful walks around Dundee and Montrose, Dominique returns to Leith where she lived for a significant part of her life. Being a port, Leith is a place where many journeys start and finish. For Dominique it was where she lived when she started out as a student, where she got married and where she had her children. Returning 20 years later, Dominique chronicles her thoughts and observations of her “Leith Walks” through her uniquely lyrical drawing, painting, writing and film.

Artist Statement

I am an artist that walks and draws. I draw lines on maps and walk those routes observing, describing and fictionalising what I find. It’s an exploration of place. Because of the fixed parameter of the line I must interpret only what’s on that line, in turn trying to find the interest in whatever is there. That is part of the challenge to look at forgotten, overlooked parts of the city. I chose the project in Leith because I stayed here, off Ferry Road. It’s where I lived when I was at college, where I got married, at the registry office round the corner from our flat and where my two children were born. Leith is part of my history and I wanted to retrace my steps, to see if Leith had changed in the years I had been away. I found it changed, but then again, not. The people are as they were – generous, chatty and funny, and the streets that took me past the flats where we lived are the same. I wrote about my walks too, my encounters with Leithers and the stories they told me. Some of these have been compiled in a book with the drawings and paintings of Ferry Road, Great Junction street, The Fit o’ the walk, Tolbooth Wynd, Constitution Street, Bernard Street and down at the docks that mark the end point of the walk.

Here is one of my entries from a walk early on in the project

“Thick, smirry, wet rain. A man in mustard trousers and a trilby cycles past, a small child in pink wellies whizzes on her scooter. I sit outside the library looking at the enormous mural painted on the gable end wall of the tenement next door. It tells the story of Leith, its industries, its activism, its story of welcoming new communities. It has been here as long as I can remember. Boys with dogs, boys with phones. A sofa put out for the rubbish. ‘Yes’ independence posters in flats opposite, the blue fading but not the desire. Anoraks and parkas, pigeons and buses. My feet are getting wet, daft to be wearing sandals on a day like today. The leaves are already starting to fall. The end of summer.”

I wanted to tell my own story of Leith through these words and images. They will come together as an exhibition with Fidra Fine Art from 4th August through to 3rd September. The gallery is open 12-5pm Saturdays and Sundays but drop-ins and appointments are very welcome midweek. There will be a Preview with refreshments on Friday 4th August from 6-8pm.

We hope you can make it along.

Mixed Summer Exhibition

Our next exhibition is a Mixed Show and will feature a great selection of work by some of the best Scottish artists, both working today and from the past 100 years or so.

We are looking forward to showing some great new work by Ann Oram, Claire Beattie, Matthew Draper, George Birrell, Carmen Ambrozevich, Alan Connell, Arran Ross, Georgina Bown, Sarah Knox, Sam Bain, Joseph Urie, Jonathan Hood, Gordon M Scott as well as older pieces by great Scottish artists such as Earl Haig, Jack Knox, Ian Fleming, Perpetua Pope & Patrick William Adam.

We will kick off with a opening evening with refreshments on Friday 23 June 6-8pm…hope to see you there.