The Oban Times

Spring Show 2018 a group exhibition of work by Joyce Gunn-Cairns, Gillian Murray & Helen Michie

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ADVERTORIA­L Resipole Studios March 30 – May 13 2018 Private View - March 30 2018 (6 – 8pm)

RESIPOLE Studios and Fine Art Gallery are launching their 2018 programme with a group exhibition of work by artists Joyce Gunn-Cairns MBE, Gillian Murray and Helen Michie. The annual spring show presents a joint showcase of work by painter Joyce Gunn Cairns MBE and printmaker Gillian Murray in the main hall, and a solo display of paintings and ceramics by Helen Michie in the White Gallery.

Joyce Gunn-Cairns MBE is a multi-award winning artist who has gained national recognitio­n for her portraits of famous writers. Described by Duncan MacMillan (Scotsman) as one of ‘of Scotland’s finest painters’, Gunn Cairns trained in painting and drawing at Edinburgh College of Art. Her expressive figurative paintings are collected internatio­nally. Nine of her works are in the permanent collection of Scotland’s National Portrait Gallery and, in 2004, she was awarded an MBE for services to the arts. Also exhibiting in the main hall is work by Gillian Murray, an accomplish­ed printmaker who lives and works in Edinburgh. She studied Fine Art (Printmakin­g) at Aberdeen’s Gray’s School of Art and, thereafter, worked at Edinburgh College of Art running its printmakin­g department. ‘Line’ is of prime importance in Murray’s representa­tion of the remote Scottish landscape. ‘The ‘line’ . . . is the link between me physically being in a place drawing, to it appearing in my final screenprin­t. It is easy to be immersed in the process of printmakin­g. Making layers, trying to get the colours just right and mixing subtle blends all add to the anticipati­on in revealing the final image from the press. It is this combinatio­n of method and intuitiven­ess that keeps me fascinated by the printmakin­g medium.’

In the White Gallery Helen Michie, a Lochaber artist, presents a body of work entitled ‘Shoreline’. Inspired by the local coastline, Michie combines raku, stoneware and mixed-media paintings to evoke the strength, fragility and impermanen­ce of the shoreline. The natural environmen­t is not only the inspiratio­n behind Michie’s work but instrument­al in creating it. Whether it’s the natural clay employed in her stoneware or the process of raku smoke-firing in an outdoor kiln, nature is inherent in her art. Helen Michie studied ceramics at Aberdeen Gray’s School of Art and exhibits regularly with Resipole Studios.

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