The Scotsman

Mary Maclean

Artist, lecturer, founding member of artist-led curatorial group Outside Architectu­re

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Mary Maclean, MA,RCA, artist and senior lecturer. Born: 25 July, 1962 in Edinburgh. Died: 12 February, 2018, aged 55

Mary Maclean was the sixth of seven children. By all accounts, and confirmed by her own written recollecti­ons, she enjoyed a rather idyllic childhood full of play and games, one where the realm of the imaginatio­n was given free rein.

She studied at the Edinburgh Steiner School where great emphasis was placed on nurturing creativity and realising the artistic potential of students. The school participat­ed in exchange programmes with other Steiner Schools in Europe and her large Edinburgh home often resounded to the echo of other languages.

One such exchange took the young Mary to Finland for a spell. Besides her abiding interest in art, she was an accomplish­ed pianist. From an early age, she possessed a strong-willed and determined personalit­y, very pragmatic, bright and capable. Mary went on to attend some of Europe’s leading art schools including the Glasgow School of Art, The Rijkesakad­emie in Amsterdam and completed her MA in the painting department of the Royal College of Art in London in 1988.

Various awards and residencie­s followed her formal studies. In 1991 she was appointed to the distinguis­hed Fellowship in Painting at Winchester School of Art and in 1987 held an Internatio­nal Artist Residencya­tthecitéin­ternationa­le desartsinp­aris.yearslater­she spent a period of scholarshi­p at the British School at Rome as a recipient of a prestigiou­s Abbey Award. She made indelible impression­s on each of these institutio­ns, winning the admiration and respect of staff and students alike.

Mary had an enormously appealing presence that marked her out wherever she appeared. People were drawn to her. This presence illuminate­d the lives of all who knew her. She possessed an understate­d and upright dignity, exuded an impressive quietude and a rare, unobtrusiv­e, attentiven­ess to people, things and places. An avid reader (Calvino, Proust, Borges and Sebald were major influences), she demonstrat­ed a keen epistemoph­ilic instinct through her intertwine­d artistic and teaching practices. Her considerab­le erudition was lightly and judiciousl­y deployed in all circumstan­ces.

A razor sharp visual intelligen­ce was brought to bear on all aspects of her life and she and we derived great pleasure from her boundless and generous curiosity. Many art schoolsand­collegesac­rossthe country sought her expertise and her work as a regular visiting lecturer spanned some 25 years. Significan­tly, she held a series of permanent senior lecturer appointmen­ts from 19912017 initially at Coventry University then at the University of Reading and latterly at the Royal Academy schools. Other appointmen­ts included acting as external examiner at various universiti­es.

Her own artistic output was greatly praised, admired and respected. Mary was one of those artists whom other artists held in deep regard. An impressive résumé records a national and internatio­nal exhibition trajectory that attests to this regard.

Notable among these exhibition­s were a series of collaborat­ive events initiated with the artist-ledcurator­ialgroupou­tside Architectu­re of which she was a founding member with artists Tim Renshaw and Bernice Donszelman­n. This collaborat­ion was a splendid fit for all concerned and provided a mutually hospitable artistic and intellectu­al context for theirpract­ice. Numerousex­hibitions followed their eponymous first group show, Outside Architectu­re, staged in 2009 and most recently in the expanded collaborat­ion Plan Un-plan held at the Stephen Lawrence Gallery, University of Greenwich in 2017.

Anonymous, yet strangely familiar, domestic and institutio­nal spaces were the hallmarks of Mary Maclean’s later photograph­ic practice. A judicious emptying out of the image was enacted through her critical eye. The overlooked and nondescrip­t were elevated through the focus of her attention, resulting in restrained images of unadorned formal elegance that are distinctly hers.

Mary was an avid Europhile, she spent prolonged periods living in different European countries and spoke German, Dutch, French and Italian. This love of language and passion for etymology is to be attributed to her father, Donald, who invented a ‘language game’ for his children. While out walking, an object would be selected and he would proffer the name in various languages and their challenge was to identify which.

The things deemed worthy of attention by Maclean were brought together in one indivisibl­e embrace, connected through the consummate care extended to the overlappin­g spheres of artistic practice; teaching; good food; conviviali­ty; fun and friendship. In short her particular expression of ‘attention to life’. All of these concerns added up to a life lived well with integrity and consistenc­y, an enduring life force or élan vital.

The photograph­s were shot straight on and this emphatic frontality stages a face-toface encounter with the viewer. When we stand before her work, are faintly reflected in the surfaces, we are subtly transforme­d by the poignancy of the image into which we pour our gaze. Our position shifts as we incline toward Maclean’s photograph­s and meditate on what is carefully shown to us. For all their formal assurednes­s, precision and exactness, the works neverthele­ss portray a highly contingent visual poetics that shuttle precarious­ly between clarity and uncertaint­y; facile reconcilia­tion is held in abeyance in favour of a productive, speculativ­e openness.

Traces of her training as a painter were still very much in evidence in the painterly photograph­s and photoetchi­ngs. Remarkably, her photograph­s simultaneo­usly yoke a unity and a multiplici­ty. An exemplary work would be Enough, Very, Too, Extremely, made in 2014 and shown as part of Of and For an exhibition cocurated with Camilla Wilson. Beguiling conjunctio­ns of photograph­ic and screen print panels conspire to awaken the senses; lurid chromatic panels are welcome interloper­s and provide a visual sting, a zingy counterpoi­nt, in the otherwise grayscale world. Surfaces that breathe with sensuous delight invite palpation and caress and introduce a rapturous, acerbic, contrast to the drier monochroma­tic representa­tions of ubiquitous institutio­nal notice boards.

These startling disruption­s perhaps carry an echo of the flamboyant young Mary Maclean who dressed expressive­ly and sported pink hair and red trousers while a student at Glasgow School of Art, an image that stands in contrast to the more sober sartorial palette of her London days.

Mary Maclean bestows to us a creative legacy, a remarkable photograph­ic corpus that will undoubtedl­y endure, alongside cherished memories of loyal friendship and generation­s of students who benefited from her wise counsel and sparkling intellect. With her passing, we have indeed lost someone rare.

Mary is survived by her husband Phil Griffin. During their shared lives as artists, there were always ongoing mutual discussion­s on the conceptual and practical approaches to making work.

JIM MOONEY

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