The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Essential tribute to an undervalue­d talent

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Grangemout­h-born Alan Davie (1920-2014) is one of the great Scottish artists of the 20th Century yet he is hardly a household name. An intuitive painter, poet, jazz musician and jeweller, Davie’s work across all these mediums spanned six decades.

All his work – be it on canvas, on a necklace, on an album or on a page – fizzes with jazzy pattern and zinging colour. A tribal thrum of energy exudes from all his artwork.

Known as the Scottish Jackson Pollock, Davie

(inset) was admired by everyone from American art collector Peggy Guggenheim, who championed the work of Pollock, to fellow artist

David Hockney. After he graduated from Edinburgh College of Art (ECA) in 1941, most of Davie’s career was spent outside Scotland. He did, however, collaborat­e with Dovecot, Edinburgh’s renowned tapestry studio.

It is fitting then that the only exhibition held in Scotland to mark his centenary in 2020 opened last week at Dovecot Studios. Alan Davie: Beginning of a Far-off World takes its title from a 1949 monotype that features in the show alongside paintings, drawings, and archive material.

The exhibition has been staged by artist and curator, Siobhan Mclaughlin, who received a first class honours in Fine Art from ECA in 2019 – almost 80 years after Davie.

Mclaughlin first came across Davie’s work in 2014 and found herself drawn by the energy and inventiven­ess of his approach to art.

Now, eight years on, through grit, determinat­ion and focus, Mclaughlin has curated a beautiful display of Davie’s work. Each decade of his career is reflected, from early paintings to drawings from the last year of his life.

Two works made in collaborat­ion with Dovecot present tapestries, Cosmic Spiral and Celtic Spirit II, a rug that sings with hot pinks and scarlet threads interspers­ed by doodle-like pattern. A must-see tribute to an art powerhouse.

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 ?? ?? ● Bubble Figure I, 1954, by Alan Davie
● Bubble Figure I, 1954, by Alan Davie

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