The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

James Morrison ca tured on film

New documentar­y on late landscape artist

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You may have heard of a Turner sky. Well, in Montrose, there is such a thing as a James Morrison sky.

Since 1965, renowned landscape painter James called the Angus town home. He could regularly be seen working outside in all weathers, attempting to capture the beautiful, ever-changing countrysid­e, skies and coastline with his paintbrush­es.

Born in Glasgow in 1932, he moved to Montrose from the Aberdeensh­ire village of Catterline because his wife Dorothy was taking up the post of head of history at Montrose Academy.

His works feature in the collection­s of the British royal family and author JK Rowling, but he shied away from the limelight, much preferring to paint. He once said of his vocation: “It’s for me. It’s my argument with myself ”.

Montrose-based filmmaker Anthony Baxter, 51, has lived in the town for 16 years. It was where his late mother grew up. She passed away when he was in his early 20s.

He filmed James for two years as he battled ill-health and failing eyesight to continue doing what he loved. Sadly, James died in August 2020, aged 88, meaning Anthony never had the chance to share the finished version of Eye Of The Storm with him.

Anthony still lives in the same house he remortgage­d more than a decade ago to fund his 2011 documentar­y You’ve Been Trumped. This was a searing account of tycoon – and later US president – Donald Trump’s controvers­ial golf developmen­t at the Menie Estate in Balmedie, and the residents who fought against it.

Anthony runs Montrose Pictures, an award-winning film and television production company. He has directed a number of documentar­ies including Flint (2020) a harrowing examinatio­n of the drinkingwa­ter public health crisis in the city of Flint, Michigan.

Anthony explains: “I think after 10 years of attempting to try to get to the truth in controvers­ial subjects and holding people to account, it was refreshing to spend that time with James – and a real privilege, too.

“It came about by chance,” he goes on.

“James wrote to me after seeing You’ve Been Trumped and he was really quite moved by the destructio­n of the landscape in Aberdeensh­ire by Trump’s bulldozers.

“As a painter who spent his life devoted to capturing the landscape, that seemed like a real vandalism.

“My uncle, Denis Rice – who you see in the film – was a friend of his and suggested we go out for a coffee.

“At that stage, Jim had stopped painting for a while because of his deteriorat­ing eyesight. I think he was finding it incredibly frustratin­g that feeling of not being able to achieve what he wanted to technicall­y.

“Denis had been encouragin­g him to get back to the painting, saying that it may be different in approach, but nonetheles­s poignant and important.”

Anthony asked James if he could film him, should he ever return to his easel. And so it transpired that James invited him into his studio – the door of which carries official-looking lettering on the glass that states: “WET PAINT”.

“He was very relaxed having me there,” Anthony reflects. “It was a good opportunit­y for me to put on record some of these moments.”

Anthony sought an outlet for the documentar­y and BBC Scotland commission­ed an hour-long feature. Additional funding then made it possible for the film to stretch to just under 90 minutes, incorporat­ing informatio­n about James’s painting trips to the Arctic.

Scottish animator Catriona Black came on board to bring a new dimension to James’s paintings and his memories – including a tense encounter with a polar bear while on a trip to Greenland.

Eye Of The Storm is a touching portrait of an artist’s final years, bringing together Anthony’s interviews with archival footage and beautiful animation against a backdrop of nature’s atmospheri­c sounds and songs by Scots musician Karine Polwart.

It premiered at the Glasgow Film Festival on February 28 and has been selected for other major internatio­nal film festivals. It was theatrical­ly released in the UK earlier this month and can be streamed via selected cinemas and arts organisati­ons.

The original hour-long version will be broadcast on BBC Scotland in the spring, with the longer theatrical version being shown at a later date. It joins James, then aged 85, as he prepares to create work for his 25th exhibition with the Scottish Gallery in Edinburgh. He had a special relationsh­ip with the gallery, showing and selling pieces there for over 60 years.

But he has been told by his GP that he cannot paint outside and his eyesight is failing to the point that he is registered as partially-sighted. James is “terrified” at the thought of no longer being able to create acceptable artworks.

The film is also interspers­ed with quotes, many from famous artists. Some, like James, struggled to continue creating in later life. French artist Henri Matisse famously painted with a long cane while bedridden, and Impression­ist Claude Monet continued to make stunning works while suffering from terrible cataracts.

One quote from Monet reads: “I will paint almost blind, as Beethoven composed completely deaf.”

Softly spoken and seemingly introspect­ive, James admits to Anthony that he is very self-critical. Anthony agrees he was something of a perfection­ist.

“He was a lovely man. There are some artists who quite like the limelight or like to have the spotlight on them and talk about their work – he definitely wasn’t one of those,” he says.

“He was the kind of person who, on the opening of one of his exhibition­s, he really didn’t enjoy that aspect of it. He was much more at home with his brushes painting outside.”

At points during the film, James can be seen watching old footage of himself, reflecting on it after all these years.

“He wasn’t a stranger to the camera himself,” says Anthony. “He had presented these old programmes for BBC Scotland called Scope.”

In Montrose, James found a subject matter that would inspire him for the rest of his artistic career. He took up a teaching post at Duncan of Jordanston­e College of Art in Dundee, doing this for 22 “happy years”.

“I think that by moving to Montrose he was able to make his mark on a different landscape, which he did in an incredible way,” Anthony says.

James studied at Glasgow School of Art between 1950 and 1954 and quickly realised his style was set to differ from that of his contempora­ries. His first “landscapes” were the city’s old tenements, many of which would go on to be demolished.

As well as his Scottish landscapes, James took extended painting trips to destinatio­ns such as Africa, France and Canada, including three trips to the Arctic in the 1990s.

He is also seen reflecting on a painting hanging at home called A Lady Remembered (2006). Created after the death of his beloved Dorothy, he tells Anthony: “It’s not a landscape; it’s just a portrait of grief.”

Anthony was able to film James attending his final exhibition at the Scottish Gallery in January 2020 – From Angus to the Arctic – just before the pandemic struck. In a wheelchair, his family by his side, he chatted, shook hands and learned that one of his 2019 studio paintings had sold.

“It’s sad I was never able to share the film with James,” Anthony says. “I shared it with John, his son, and Judith, his daughter, at the end of last year and they’ve been very supportive of it.”

After filming finished, James went to live in a care home and Anthony was able to visit him before Covid hit. He was still able to do some painting there.

An audio-described version of the film has also been created. Anthony explains: “James was somebody who painted outside and he was very aware of all the sounds and atmosphere of being out in the open in the countrysid­e. He was absorbing all of that in his work.

“We have tried with the sounds and the music and this audio descriptiv­e version to give people who are struggling with vision the opportunit­y to really enjoy his work.

“It is possible to have his work described in a way that brings it to life in an audio form. I think he would have appreciate­d that.”

To watch Eye of the Storm via Dundee Contempora­ry Arts, visit: athome.dca.org.uk

BY MOVING TO LIVE IN MONTROSE HE WAS ABLE TO MAKE HIS MARK ON A DIFFERENT LANDSCAPE, WHICH HE DID IN AN INCREDIBLE WAY

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 ??  ?? APPROACHIN­G STORM: Landscape painter James Morrison lived and worked in Montrose for most of his life.
APPROACHIN­G STORM: Landscape painter James Morrison lived and worked in Montrose for most of his life.
 ??  ?? Above: James Morrison in his studio. Below: Bergs, Otto Fiord,( c.1992) and director Anthony Baxter.
Above: James Morrison in his studio. Below: Bergs, Otto Fiord,( c.1992) and director Anthony Baxter.
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