The Herald

Sketches featuring figures of Scotland on show

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SKETCHES for a stained glass window commission­ed by Scottish philanthro­pist Andrew Carnegie are among a number of works by Queen Victoria’s favourite artist appearing in an exhibition later this year.

The rarely seen images form part of a retrospect­ive of Dunfermlin­e-born artist Sir Joseph Noel Paton, which opens on September 14 in Dunfermlin­e Carnegie Library & Galleries.

The sketches, featuring figures from Scotland’s heroic past, were designs for a window in Dunfermlin­e Abbey commission­ed by Dunfermlin­e-born Carnegie who, as he said in one letter, wanted to create a “thing of beauty to stand for centuries”.

Carnegie, who returned from the US to see the window shortly after it was unveiled in June 1884, wrote to Paton to express his pleasure with the finished work: “I have seen the window under various conditions and it is superb. I am more than satisfied – I am delighted.”

Exhibition curator Lesley Lettice said the commission was important to Paton as well, and added: “As a son of Dunfermlin­e, Paton was thrilled to create the designs for the Abbey windows – and we’re delighted to be showing them alongside so many highlights from his distinguis­hed career.”

The exhibition features works from eight public collection­s and a number of private loans, and includes Carnegie’s letter to Paton as well as a letter to Paton’s sister Amelia Hill, a renowned sculptor, in which he describes Paton as “Dunfermlin­e’s greatest son”.

The so-called Carnegie Historical Window, which can be seen in the nave of Dunfermlin­e Abbey, is considered to be highly symbolic. It includes King Malcolm

III and his wife Margaret in reference to the founding of the Abbey.

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