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September, 2009 | Scottish Landscape Art - Scottish Landscape Paintings

Archive for September, 2009

Getting Your Priorities Right!

From the summit of Ben DonichLast Thursday I received an email from Irene, a member of our local mountaineering club Air na Creagan.  It said that a group from the club were heading up to Arrochar to walk Ben Donich.  Wow, this is a great little hill and I was desperate to get out.  With everything taking off at the studio this year I’ve really not been doing the walking I used to.  …But, I have too much on at the moment and so decided reluctantly that I couldn’t join them.   It was a shame because as I say, it’s a great little hill …not that I saw much of it the first time we went there, about four years ago.

Anita and I had organised the walk that day for the club and we were shocked to find a very high turn out …20 folk plus a dog. We were even more shocked to find the cloud base just above the height of the Rest and Be Thankful where we all met.  So then, that day 20 people plus a dog followed an almost blind man and his guide up a hill in thick cloud ….and they say I’m mad for walking hills in the first place!

The Cobbler from Ben Donich

When Anita and I went back to Ben Donich for our second visit, we were on our own and the weather was just perfect.  High white clouds in a bright blue sky.  The hill itself is a long sort of whale back of mainly grass and occasional crags.  As you gain height the views of the neighbouring hills Beinn an Lochain, The Cobbler, The Brack and Beinn Ime, get better and better.  Not too far from the top, there’s a wonderful tangle of rock where the ridge appears to be split and there’s a wee scramble down.  Finally at the summit, the views are huge and very fine.  I’m told you can see out over the firth of Clyde to Arran and Ailsa Craig …it’s quite a spot on a good day.

So then, having missed the walk with Irene, by Sunday …well, I couldn’t stand it any longer …we dropped everything and rushed for a hill!   We went over to the Ochil Hills, a small but prominent range that lie not far from Stirling.  We had a grand little day wandering the grassy tops of Ben Ever, Ben Cleuch, and Ben Buck.  And it’s amazing what a day on the hills can do, I felt invigorated and I’ve had a great couple of days painting this week.

In the Ochil Hills

Walking in Circles?

On Ben Mor CoigachI took the decision back in 1990, when my sight first started to deteriorate, to carry on hill walking come what may.  Initially I bought myself a traditional walking stick in the hope that it would give me support as well as tell me a little of what the ground in front of me was doing.  My partner Anita took on the job of guide.   Well we found we could still walk on the hill like this albeit very slowly, but I really wasn’t sure about the sense of what I was doing and really wasn’t very confident.

In 2001 after moving to Scotland, I heard about a new course being run at Glenmore Lodge (Scotland’s national outdoor centre).  It was a mountain skills course for visually impaired folk …..wow!   I signed up and in September that year I did the course and without being over dramatic …it changed my life.

Summit plateau, A' Mharconaich

It was a fantastic course, but the biggest thing I got from it was the fact that I met six other visually impaired idiots like myself  …. all still wanting to climb mountains despite their lack of sight!  It was great, I wasn’t the only one.  After that, nothing could stop us and we started venturing out into the Scottish Highlands on a very regular basis, tackling many of the bigger hills. 

With the help of close friend Guy Hansford and members of our local mountaineering club Air na Creagan, I’ve clambered, felt and sworn my way over many hills and up many rocky scrambles.  Indeed, back in February 2008 Anita and I climbed our 100th Munro … A’Mharconaich, an icy plateau high up in the Drumochter hills. 

From Cul Mor, Assynt

With such limited sight I never really thought I’d be able to climb big hills again, let alone a hundred of them.  I decided therefore that I ought to write to Glenmore Lodge to tell them and thank them for running the course that gave me the confidence to do this.  To my surprise they invited me back on that years VI course …this time to do a talk about the walks and climbs I’d done.

And strangely, the paintings I do, this website and the fact that I’m writing this blog are all down to the course at Glenmore Lodge back in 2001.  If I hadn’t done it, I’d almost certainly not have had the confidence to get out so much.  It was this very intense period of hill walking and the stunning scenery that made me turn my paintings to the Scottish landscape.  I might still be drawing building sites if not for Glenmore Lodge!

In a round about way, I’m trying to explain why I’ve spent two days this week sat at my computer rather than painting in my studio.  A month ago I got an email from the Mountaineering Council of Scotland inviting me to write a short article about my walking and painting ….for their quarterly magazine ‘Scottish Mountaineer’.  The MC of S is the organisation who originally set up the ‘Mountain skills courses for the visually impaired’.  Full circle I think.

Jolomo Award 2009 – and what it means to me.

It’s been three months now since I received the Jolomo Award 2009 for Scottish Landscape Painting.

It was great timing as the previous year I’d taken the decision to move from working on an amateur basis to working professionally. The final transition took place at the end of May and I heard I’d won the Jolomo award on June 12th.

There’s obviously a lot that comes with winning such a prestigious award, but for me one of the biggest things has been that it financially underpins my new professional status. One of my biggest worries about full time self employment was that I’d be tempted to try and create more ‘saleable’ images rather than concentrating on developing the very best work. The Jolomo award now gives me two year security and an opportunity to really develop my work and practice.

At this early stage it seems vitally important to promote this as widely as possible ….I’ve come to realise, perhaps a little late, that being an artist is not just about creating the work …..one has to be a business person too.

Of course, the award has helped greatly in spreading news of my work. Since June I’ve had articles in a number of newspapers, one of the most interesting being in The Scotsman on Saturday 13th June ….the day after the award was announced. There’s also been increased interest from galleries and I already have a fairly busy schedule next year.

One of the problems of having such limited sight is that everything takes me a great deal of time. I paint fairly slowly, but I now have much more work to do on the computer …at times I seem to be doing almost as much writing as painting! I’m currently working on an article for the ‘Scottish Mountaineer’, the quarterly magazine for the Mountaineering Council of Scotland. My work is very closely connected to the walking and climbing I do in the Scottish Highlands and this side of things was greatly helped back in 2001 when I went on the inspired ‘Mountain skills course for visually impaired’, run by the MC o f S at Glenmore Lodge near Aviemore. This course gave me the confidence to get back into the mountains despite my visual impairment and these walks are now the main source for my work.

I’m run off my feet since the Jolomo award …but it’s a great problem to have!

Keith Salmon

PS: Shortly after I won the Jolomo Award I was interviewed by Ali Abubakar of the Scottish Art Circle. You can read the first part of that interview here.

Scottish Natural Heritage Exhibition

Keith Salmon Art Exhibition, Scottish Natural Heritage, Inverness

SNH Inverness Exhibition 4

The exhibition I’ve held at Great Glen House, the head quarters of Scottish Natural heritage in Inverness, ended last week and on Monday I had to travel up and collect the work.

It’s been a good experience and the space was great …big and light.  The show ran throughout August and contained a selection of 25 paintings and drawings.  As this wasn’t a gallery show it was difficult to know quite how many people would see it.  SNH promoted it well through their press officer and certainly a number of people from outside the organisation turned up for the talk I did about the work on 20th August.

This said, the majority of those who viewed the work were employees of SNH and I understand it created a fair bit of interest ….but then they did all have to walk by it to get to the canteen! Oh well, I sold a few paintings so quite good really.   As a follow up I’ve been asked to write a short article for the SNH magazine.  This could be quite useful as the magazine is circulated to a large number of people …should be a good way of getting people to my website.

The work is all back in the studio now and I’m already planning for the Wasps Open Studios Weekend on Saturday / Sunday 3rd/ 4th October 2009.  Much cleaning and tidying to be done before then, but that can wait …painting to be done now.

SNH Inverness exhibition 2

After selling a couple of the long thin paintings (76 x 23 cm) at Inverness, I need to get a couple of replacements done.  I enjoy working in this format and it certainly seems to be popular.  I have one painting on the go at the moment …this based on a day a couple of years ago when we did an icy scramble on Ben Lui …it was a fantastic and exciting day  and the colours and light were quite special.  That said I’m still struggling to get this down in paint but hopefully I’ll get there soon.
SNH Inverness exhibition 3