The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Image is everything at Mcmanus

Dundee’s Mcmanus Galleries opens two new portraitur­e exhibition­s tomorrow. Revealing Characters runs throughout 2018 and Face to Face runs to May 20

- Gillian lord

The first thing you see is a face, adrift in a cold ocean, vivid blue eyes looking away as if in contemplat­ion. A diving helmet sits atop the man’s greying hair, the iron collar of an old-fashioned diving suit circles his fisherman’s collar. If this man is drowning, he doesn’t look at all worried. Rather, he seems philosophi­cal.

Closer inspection reveals he is not only in the sea, he is of the sea too. He’s part of the water,– a shark forms his frown, squid etch themselves into the lines of his face. There is much being said about him, and the title has a lot to say too – it’s called “Whisper a vow to the long sweet silence under blessing and a bell”(a portrait of George Mackay Brown 1921 – 1996 by Ian Charles Scott).

George Mackay Brown was, of course, Scotland’s much-loved poet, novelist and lifetime champion of the Orkney Isles. This is the work at the entrance to Revealing Characters, one of two big portrait exhibition­s at the Mcmanus in Dundee, the other being Face to Face in the adjacent gallery space. In all there will be 112 works by 87 artists on show in two galleries, all celebratin­g portraitur­e.

These exhibition­s have been curated to offer us insight into the painter and the painted, and glimpses into other worlds, both lives and times. They had our selfie-obsessed culture in mind when curating these exhibition­s notes Anna Robinson, fine and applied art section leader at the gallery, and while there are no answers, the fun is in the questions.

In order to get us thinking and involved in the lives of the people gazing at us, the presentati­on and grouping of the works has been carefully thought out, explains Susan Keracher, fine art

curator. Sometimes extra elements are added to give a work further context. For example the striking portrait by society painter Howard Sommervill­e of Sylvia Booth, debutante daughter of shipping magnate Sir Alfred, celebrates an elegant, beautiful young woman dressed in the height of 1920s fashion. Next to this a similar style dress is displayed.

Revealing Characters looks at the enduring attraction of the portrait as a character sketch, drawing on works from the late 1800s to contempora­ry pieces.

Face to Face, meanwhile, looks at what makes a successful portrait, what is compelling and why. Its intention is to draw the viewer in and make them part of the process. After all, since they were first commission­ed thousands of years ago, portraits were meant to be looked at, and in many cases they were status

It’s an observer’s world, this wealth of portraits, drawn from all walks of life

symbols, records of success and wealth for posterity.

Utter privilege almost commands you across the room to stand beneath Philip de Laszlo’s imperious The Right Honourable Mabel Ogilvy, Dowager Countess of Airlie where, beneath her haughty gaze, you notice the lustre of her pearls, the soft sheen of her kid gloves.

Status and wealth couldn’t be further removed from the group of works by Joseph Mckenzie, celebrated post-war photograph­er and teacher in Duncan of Jordanston­e’s photograph­y department. His black and white pictures of children, chosen in homage to the Year of Young People, are moments in ordinary lives, captured in glorious informalit­y, while at the far wall the great and good from Dundee’s past look down on us from their superior height, coolly observing us observing them in their ermine robes and Provost’s chains.

It’s an observer’s world, this wealth of portraits, drawn from all walks of life, and telling a story through the people gazing out from their moment in time.

Revealing Characters opens Saturday, January 27 and continues throughout 2018. Face to Face also opens tomorrow, and runs until May 20. Both exhibition­s are free.

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 ?? Archive and Alexander Moffat. Pictures: Alan Richardson, The Joseph Mckenzie ?? Left: Susan Keracher with one of the portraits on display. Clockwise from above left: Cuffed? by Joe Mckenzie, 1975; Alexander Moffat’s portrait of Tom Nairn; and freelance art technician­s John Louden and Henri Meadows carry the portrait of William...
Archive and Alexander Moffat. Pictures: Alan Richardson, The Joseph Mckenzie Left: Susan Keracher with one of the portraits on display. Clockwise from above left: Cuffed? by Joe Mckenzie, 1975; Alexander Moffat’s portrait of Tom Nairn; and freelance art technician­s John Louden and Henri Meadows carry the portrait of William...
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