The Scotsman

Online art

Galleries have upped their game with their online offerings such that you need never miss another exhibition again Duncanmacm­illan

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Duncan Macmillan reviews work by artists including Jane Macneill, Alexander Moffat and Helen Bellany

Not long ago I would never have considered reviewing a show that I had not seen. How times have changed. During the extreme period of lockdown the only way to see any art at all was online. The galleries responded by creating online shows and generally putting things online in a much more extensive and sophistica­ted way than they had ever done previously, or at least those galleries did that had to make living. The public galleries were slower to respond. I won’t say that all that has turned me into an armchair critic, but it does mean that there is now a much fuller and more accessible programme of exhibition­s online than there was before, and while public transport is still to be avoided by the prudent, virtual visits to some of the country’s more farflung galleries are possible.

It is a good few years since I visited An Lanntair in Stornoway for instance, but, online, the gallery’s Lockdown Sketchbook­s exhibition is the collected results of a rather remarkable project. At the beginning of lockdown sketchbook­s were sent out to over 100 participan­ts. This was then followed up over the course of a month with emails setting a daily challenge. The completed sketchbook­s were then sent back and put together into a show. If you can find your way on the An Lanntair website to the “virtual tour” of the exhibition – it’s not that easy, but do persevere – you can see the enormous variety of the results and the evident enthusiasm the project inspired. The challenges included such things as “the middle of the night,” or “the contents the fridge.” There is humour, poetry, a lot of skill and much else in the very diverse results. A selection of the responses from people who have taken part is also included and these

are as interestin­g as the drawings themselves. The whole thing was clearly a big success and at a time when there wasn’t much of that about.

Remote of course is a matter of where you start from. The Kilmorack Gallery doesn’t consider itself remote at all. In a handsome Georgian church a mile or so up Strathglas­s, it is only half an hour from Inverness, but correspond­ingly it is quite a long way from the Central Belt. The Silence of Mountains, a collection of Jane Macneill’s quietly poetic paintings of Scottish mountains, is currently showing. She manages to capture their grand simplicity and at the same time hint at the infinite complexiti­es of changing light and weather without getting bogged down in detail. The result in Winter Mountain with Reflection­s of Two Clouds ( Carn Eilrig), for instance, or Mountain Pass in Red and Blue ( Lairig Ghru) is a contemplat­ive tranquilit­y and quiet richness. This show finished in the gallery at the end of August, but remains visible online.

Concurrent­ly, but only online,

Kilmorack is also showing A Celebratio­n of Trees. This is its second virtual Ikigai Room. Ikegai is Japanese and means roughly whatever it is that gives your life purpose, a fancy way of saying raison d’être in fact, although put that way the opposite condition, having no raison d’être, does sound rather bleak. Some of the show is also a bit elusive. It’s a room with shifting walls. Suitably for the Japanese theme, it opens with a quotation from the 17th- century Japanese poet, Matsuo Basho, about the wind in the cedars. This is accompanie­d by a changing sequence of rather beautiful photos of trees, but for the life of me I couldn’t find any reference to the artist responsibl­e. After that there are 11 artists who are identified, some familiar, others less so. Each is represente­d by a single, unlabelled work with a link to other images. Ian Westacott, for instance, creates portrait memorials of great trees, especially of the elms on the Black Isle that eventually fell prey to Dutch elm disease. His representa­tive image here is a superb etching of a

Lockdown Sketchbook­s An Lantair, Stornoway

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A Celebratio­n of Trees

mighty elm called the Owl Tree. It is a little frustratin­g, though, that if you click on the image, it takes you to a different etching. You then have to search through his works to find the one you started with. Robert Powell is another wonderful printmaker. His image in the virtual room is unidentifi­ed, but if you read the introducti­on by gallery owner Tony Davidson you can deduce that the melancholy looking chap sitting with a spade at the foot of a laurel tree is Apollo. The laurel is Daphne after metamorpho­sis; in Ovid’s story she escaped Apollo’s lecherous clutches by turning into a laurel tree. The identifica­tion is really guesswork though, for if you look for the print among Powell’s other works, it isn’t there. The same seems to be true of Allan Macdonald. His fine painting of a yellow tree must remain unidentifi­ed. Mark Edward’s Stopping to Watch the Ten O’clock

Jane Macneill: The Silence of Mountains

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Both at Kilmorack Gallery, near Beauly

Alexander Moffat and Helen Bellany

Junor Gallery, St Andrews

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Helen Bellany cheerfully admits that she took 50 years out married to John

Train is less elusive. Click on it and that’s what you get, two men in hats standing in the snow to watch a steam train pass on a distant viaduct. Three trees seem a little incidental, but it’s a nice homage to Magritte. Ade Adesina’s Let There be Light has her familiar baobab tree standing on the cracked mud of a post- apocalypti­c, dried up sea. The artist whose work is least familiar to me here is Duke Christie. Working with wood, he collaborat­es with his medium. Ash, for instance, is a rectangle of the eponymous wood carved as though its concentric year rings had become waves. Click on it and it leads you to a different work, but that can be forgiven as this substitute is even more striking. Called Dark Star, a circle of black burr elm sits in a field of ash polished so that the woodgrain becomes the dark star’s flaming corona. It is quite beautiful.

The increased presence of the galleries online also means that even closer to home shows that you may have missed are still visible. Alexander Moffat and Helen Bellany have just had a joint show in St

Andrews at the Junor Gallery, for instance. Technicall­y it finished at the end of August, but all is not lost for it is still online. Contempora­ries at Edinburgh College of Art, Moffat has had a full career as an artist. Helen Bellany cheerfully admits that she took 50 years out married to John Bellany. “Had I been intimidate­d by the power of John’s work? Most definitely,” she declares, but continues, “Did I resent this? Most definitely not.” Welcome back! The result is a collection of freely painted, sensitive watercolou­rs of scenes in Italy and Scotland. The colour is delicate and there seems to be no hint in them of her late husband’s rhetoric. Hers is a quite different sensibilit­y. Moffat’s subjects are principall­y mountains, Suilven dark blue against a scarlet sunset, the jagged Apuan Alps in Tuscany pink and blue in the morning light, and – painted from his studio window – Salisbury Crags scarlet in the setting sun.

To see these shows online, visit www. lanntair. com, www. kilmorackg­allery. co. uk and www. junorgalle­ry. scot

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 ?? Reflected Trees Siam ?? Large Coud over Glen Tromie by Jane Macneill, main;
Reep, Cambodia by Tony Davidson from A Celebratio­n of Trees, centre right; Lockdown Sketchbook­s at An Lantair, Stornoway, above and right
Reflected Trees Siam Large Coud over Glen Tromie by Jane Macneill, main; Reep, Cambodia by Tony Davidson from A Celebratio­n of Trees, centre right; Lockdown Sketchbook­s at An Lantair, Stornoway, above and right
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 ??  ?? Suilven IV by Alexander Moffat, above; Canisp and Suliven by Helen Bellany, below
Suilven IV by Alexander Moffat, above; Canisp and Suliven by Helen Bellany, below

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