The National (Scotland)

Scot fulfils ‘lifelong ambition’ and wins major art prize

Artist set for residency

- BY LAURA POLLOCK

AMOTHER of three who went to art school in her late 40s and “fulfilled a lifelong ambition” has been named as the winner of Scotland’s biggest prize for an emerging artist.

Charlene Scott, 52, of Tranent in East Lothian has won the 2024 Glenfiddic­h Artist in Residence Prize, worth £15,000, for her work using folded paper and home-made botanical pigments.

She will now spend three months this summer at the distillery in Dufftown, Morayshire, alongside artists from all over the world on the Glenfiddic­h Artists in Residence (AiR) programme.

The prize, supported by distillery owners William Grant & Sons, is awarded annually at the RSA New Contempora­ries exhibition in Edinburgh.

Charlene, who has two grown-up daughters and a 16-year-old son, fulfilled a lifelong ambition when she started a degree course at Edinburgh College of Art in her late 40s.

She had worked as a travel agent for 10 years, then did a variety of jobs from home while raising her children, but her passion for art and making remained a constant.

Her distinctiv­e work, made by folding paper to create lines and patterns then adding colour from natural pigments she makes herself, caught the eye of the Glenfiddic­h Award judges.

Andy Fairgrieve, co-ordinator of the Glenfiddic­h Artists in Residence programme, said: “It would be easy to underestim­ate the works of Charlene Scott, however, the longer you linger and absorb her works more is revealed.

“Not unlike a well-crafted single malt whisky, her work is a clean yet complex celebratio­n of simplicity with a great sense of hidden depth. She will be a perfect fit to this year’s Glenfiddic­h residency.”

Charlene said she was “shocked and delighted” to win the award. “The residency is such a gift. My work is quite slow, and I need time to soak up my surroundin­gs. I’m really looking forward to developing my work at Glenfiddic­h.”

She began making her own colours from foraged plants while doing a foundation course in art at Edinburgh College and now grows plants to make dyes in her own garden.

She said: “I use a stove in the garden for making pigments – when I use the kitchen my family complains about the smell!

“I can’t help but make connection­s between the aesthetics of minimalism and the basic principles of herbalism and ecology. I use line, folds, repetition and pattern along with botanical pigments to build a framework that I hope will entice a viewer to look closely and linger a little longer.”

While at Edinburgh College of Art, Charlene won the James Cumming Award for Draughtsma­nship, the Astaire Art Prize and an RSA John Kinross Travel Scholarshi­p, which enabled her to spend six weeks in Florence.

The RSA New Contempora­ries exhibition brings together the work of recent graduates selected from all five Scottish art schools. Due to a cancelled exhibition during the pandemic, this year’s showcase features 104 artists, double the usual number, drawing graduates from the classes of 2022 and 2023.

 ?? Photograph: Colin Hattersley ?? Charlene Scott in her studio at home with some of her work
Photograph: Colin Hattersley Charlene Scott in her studio at home with some of her work

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