Lost in Wonder

4 March 2020 - 28 March 2020

We welcome Robert Macmillan’s second solo exhibition with The Gallery. Macmillan has been working continuously since graduating from Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design in Dundee in 1997 and has quietly emerged as a serious contributor to Scottish landscape painting. Macmillan lists the Tonalists as well as Turner as major influences on his work, but his paintings can also be read in the context of a north-east tradition in Scottish painting. While his work seldom represents a specific locality, Macmillan gathers his subject matter by walking from his home in Broughty Ferry, now often accompanied by his young family.

A little further afield he visits Lunan Bay, Tentsmuir Beach and West Sands near St Andrews, deeply familiar places where he allows himself to absorb the particular atmosphere derived from the ever-changing weather and seasons. As he walks he observes the changing light, the nuances of cloud, the effect of sun on water, mist lingering in the morning or a haar rolling in from the North Sea. Click here to read more about Robert’s studio practice and inspirations.

Click here to purchase the accompanying catalogue.

Born: 1974
Place of Birth: Glasgow

From 1993 to 1997 Robert studied Drawing and Painting (Fine Art) at Duncan of Jordanstone, focusing on single figured portraits that were greatly influenced by the old masters.

“For some time now my work has involved using a figure within voids of empty space. I have been fascinated by the delicate relationship that exists between figure and space; too much of the dark void and the figure is engulfed; too much focus on the figure and the presence of the space is forgotten. I love the intimacy, and the intensity, which can be created through the use of a single face or solitary figure, theatrically lit, embraced in a velvety darkness that surrounds.

In both subject matter and use of paint, there is a definite acknowledgement of painters past. Rembrandt’s influence permeates through all my work, not only his use of chiaroscuro but also the surface quality that he achieves with the paint like the sleeve of the bridegroom in his work ‘The Jewish Bride’; the constant reworking of paint, creating a texture and luminosity that begins to emanate from the source material and, through constant scraping and glazing, achieve a richer conclusion.

Over the last couple of years my work has included landscape studies; inspired in part by the magnificent views close to where I live along the Fife Coastal Route. The work also demonstrates the influence of a number of landscape painters who I greatly admire: James McNeill Whistler, George Innes and many of the American Tonalists. There has been a great desire to recreate the tones and atmosphere found in the works of these painters and also seen daily in my surrounding landscape. My paintings have thus developed into intimate studies of the relationship between light, colour and form of the Scottish landscape”

 

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