Showing newest posts with label Watson. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label Watson. Show older posts

Sunday, 3 August 2008

The show goes on


The Massie, Moir & Watson show at Flaubert had a very busy opening on Friday evening. The paintings were very well received and plenty of sales were made by all three painters. It was a great evening and we're looking foward to a busy week ahead. The exhibition runs until 10th August.

Thursday, 8 May 2008

Good times in the Capital

Yarrow Trees, oil on canvas, 28" x 28" 2008 © Claudia Massie



An interesting day in Edinburgh yesterday. First, I met a man about a gallery which may or may not show some of my stuff at some time in the future and then I met a man about a gallery which is certainly showing my paintings in the imminent future. This is the Flaubert Gallery of Stockbridge, Edinburgh where I'm exhibiting in August with Camilla Watson and Nicola Moir.
(http://www.camillawatson.co.uk/, http://www.nicolamoir.com/) I got a good look at the space I have to fill so now have a rough idea of the amount of work required, probably about twenty paintings of various sizes. I have done quite a lot for the exhibition already but, especially following my third meeting of the day, have much more to do. Meeting #3 was with a collector who has bought some of my work before. This time she made off with three new pieces, including the painting above. She has impeccable taste.

Wednesday, 30 April 2008

Yarrow revisited


Yarrow Hillside, oil on canvas, 2008 © Claudia Massie
Back to the palette today, and work continues on the Border landscapes. I'm doing an exhibition in August at the Flaubert Gallery in Edinburgh, in conjunction with regular co-conspirators Nicola Moir and Camilla Watson, and so I'm working with this in mind. The idea is to have a coherent body of work that will look mighty impressive when all put together, and the majority of it will probably be landscapes. I used to paint mostly grim city scenes but the bucolic charms of the Borderland have taken over of late. Here's a lively painting of a hillside up Yarrow, scarred by sheep tracks, quad tracks and broken down dykes, cowering beneath a tumultous sky. A Geologist tells me this hillside was once upon a time a sand dune, and I think you can see that in its form.
Update: Seems the Geologist actually said 'it looks like a sand dune' but it wasn't one, not ever. Does look like one though. It's a turbodite actually. Apologies for any confusion. I am ignorant, and deaf, and don't pay attention to Geology lessons.
To see work by Moir and Watson follow these links: