
Alexander Goudie (1933–2004) is widely regarded as one of Scotland’s greatest figurative painters, an artist whose exuberant personality, technical brilliance and devotion to the traditions of European painting shaped a remarkable and highly individual career. Born in Paisley in 1933, he enrolled at Glasgow School of Art at just sixteen, where he studied under influential tutors including David Donaldson. A gifted but outspoken student, Goudie immersed himself in the study of the great masters, particularly Manet, Velázquez and Van Dyck, developing an understanding of paint as both material and language. His training emphasised draughtsmanship, tonal control and the “alchemy of paint”, the tension between line and colour, and the ability to transform lived experience into art.