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scottish landscape paintings | Scottish Landscape Art - Scottish Landscape Paintings - Part 3

Posts Tagged ‘scottish landscape paintings’

‘Below Suilvern, a wet afternoon’

1 'Below Suilvern, a wet afternoon', Work in progress

‘Below Suilvern, a wet afternoon’

‘Below Suilvern, a wet afternoon’, Acrylic & Pastel, 30 x 30 cm, (Work in progress)

This is the latest stage of the new small painting I’m doing based on a sketch I made back in May. We walked from Lochinver to the north side of the prominent peak of Suilvern and I stopped to make several small drawings of this fine hill. For the first few hours the weather had been dry but with an increasingly strong wind blowing. We walked to a point below the eastern end of the hill but as we made our way back west the weather deteriorated rapidly with driving rain and mist increasingly shrouding the hill. I worked into one of the sketches when I got back into the dry and tried to capture something of this damp and wild scene.

The painting is probably not quite finished yet but I’ll wait and see for a short while before doing any more to it. Visitors are always welcome to my studio so do call in if you’re in the area.

‘From Conival, May’

297 'From Conival, May' Acrylic & Pastel, 2013, 40 x 40 cm

‘From Conival, May’

‘From Conival, May’ Acrylic & Pastel, 2013, 40 x 40 cm

This painting has been in my mind this week as I’m using the image of it for an advert I’m placing in the 2014 Ayrshire & Arran Visitor Guide.   I think this is quite a strong painting and it is definitely a bold image.  Of course, it’s based on a view we had a number of years ago when we walked Conival in Assynt and I’m already thinking that a return visit to this fine peak, might be good when we go back to Assynt again in a few weeks time.

Anyway, I hope you like this piece.  It’s currently away but should be back in the studio by the end of the month.

Glen Rosa – a working walk

Don’t be too shocked, we finally got the boots on again and made it across to the Isle of Arran yesterday. As you know, I’ve wanted to get back to Glen Rosa for the last couple of months but the extremely poor weather has until yesterday, kept us at bay.

Glen Rosa, Isle of Arran

Glen Rosa, Isle of Arran

Have to say that it didn’t look altogether promising as we disembarked from the ferry in Brodick at eight o’clock yesterday morning ….it was absolutely pouring down with rain and we got quite wet just getting the 100 metres to the waiting room where we’d planned to don the waterproofs. Of course by the time we had all the gear on the rain had passed and as we walked along the promenade the first breaks in the dark cloud were appearing.

It’s always a good walk from Brodick to Glen Rosa and well worth doing just for the spectacular scenery but this trip was a working one. With the plans for creating a big Glen Rosa drawing all arranged with the Harbour Arts Centre in Irvine later in the year, I needed to get back to the glen in order to start planning how exactly I’m going to do the piece. Yesterdays visit to the glen was to look at and record the first half of the glen. I wanted to spend time looking and thinking and making a few simple sketches.

As we entered the glen a Golden Eagle flew overhead, low enough for me to see it ….it made a good start to our day. Up to this point it had been difficult to know quite how much snow there was on the hills as the cloud level had been very low, but things quickly improved and we started getting glimpses of Beinn Nuis and Beinn a’ Chliabhain, the summits of both looking white and wintry.

Goat Fell from glen Rosa ...approaching shower

Goat Fell from glen Rosa …approaching shower

A little further on and the glen swings around to the NW and at this point the views open up even more and the fine peak of Cir Mhor stands dramatically at the head of the glen. With the cloud rising and breaking and the periods of blue sky and bright sun increasing, we got some wonderful views and the colours were really quite intense at times. I spent a lot of time standing or sitting doing some quick sketches as we made our way up the footpath at the side of the river. Nita was busy taking photos and was particularly interested in the river that was full and busy but with incredibly clear water ……in the bright sun the patterns of the rocks underneath the water looked wonderful.

It was a very profitable day and I got a lot of information in the way of sketches and photographs. I’m still not one hundred per cent sure how I’m going to do this big drawing but I have come away with a much better idea. Now I need to get up to the head of the glen and record that section.

‘Towards the Lawers group’

‘Towards the Lawers group’, Acrylic & Pastel, 2006,

'Towards the Lawers group', Acrylic and Pastel, 2006, 91.5 x 34 cm, sold_1

‘Towards the Lawers group’

I was talking about hills with a visitor to my studio the other day and they mentioned Ben Lawers Nita and I have walked this big hill a good number of times over the last 15 years and it always makes for a fine day, especially so if its lofty summit is clear.  At a little under 4000 ft you certainly feel like you’re on top of the world when you’re sat at its sometimes busy top, with spectacular views all around the Southern Highlands.

Anyway, I found myself thinking about this painting and thought it’d make a good ‘Artwork of the week’.  It is based on a view we had looking towards the group of hills of which Ben Lawers is the dominant peak.  It made a fine scene from a neighbouring Corbett and I remember standing for a good few minutes on this frost covered hilltop just staring at this amazing winter scene.

Computer blues …getting brighter!

Glen Rosa, January 2013

Glen Rosa, January 2013

Last week I moaned about having problems with my newly updated computer.  Now then, I have to admit that I’m not the most computer literate person in the world and so trying to get everything back to normal has proved a little challenging!  Thankfully Nita is up for a challenge and she’s been spending a good few hours sat at this machine sorting things out for me. 

As I think I said in a previous blog , I’ve also  just changed the magnification and screen reader  software I use. This new software, Zoomtext, seems to be excellent but again, there’s a lot of new things to learn, so this, coupled with a rather new look Windows 7, is taking a lot of time to find my way around. Nita has done an excellent job and she’s re-loaded most of my software and it seems to be working quite well now…..I think I’ll have to buy Nita some chocolates and a bottle of wine as a thank you for all her work.

I’ve been working on a new painting this week and it’s starting to come on now.  It’s based on a small scene we saw in Glen Rosa last January and I was rather hoping to get back over there again yesterday in order to start doing some serious planning for the big drawing  project.  The forecast had been excellent, calm, dry and reasonably bright ….it would have been the perfect day.  We’d got it all booked and had planned to catch the 7 o’clock ferry over so that we’d get the maximum time to wander through the glen, stopping to do sketches and take some photos.   Unfortunately my plans fell apart on Wednesday when a courier I’d booked, failed to collect!  Ahhhhh!  I’d waited at the studio all day but somehow the courier couldn’t find me!  So, they said that they’d  try again the next day …Thursday.  I’m glad to say that the painting was finally collected, albeit a day late and with a bit of luck …it’ll be delivered safely sometime today.   We’re now hoping that we might be able to get over to Arran this weekend or sometime next week; I’ll be checking the Mountain Weather information Service again and hoping for another fine day

Plans for some more footage

You may remember that earlier this year I met photographer Daniel Thornton at the Preview to my exhibition at ‘the gallery on the corner’.   After seeing the work he asked if he could come over to Irvine and take some film in the studio, which he did a few weeks later.  As we got talking we realised that we had similar interests in wild places and although our approaches to our respective art forms is somewhat different, we are both using landscape as the basis for our work.

Dan then joined us for a couple of walks in the hills.  He was interested in seeing how Nita guided me on rough paths and open hillsides and on our first walk, in Glen Rosa on the Isle of Arran, he took quite a lot of film as well as recording a short interview between his friend David Feeney and I.   It was during this walk that I told them about my plans to create a large drawing based on this glen.  During our slow wander to the head of the glen and back, ideas of how I could develop the project were thrown around and I think that it was at the end of this walk that what at the start of the day had been just an idea, had by the close become a positive plan.

Following this day, I gradually honed the idea further and in late August put a detailed proposal together to do the large drawing as part of an exhibition at the Harbour Arts Centre here in Irvine.   They were very keen on the project and I’ve been offered the gallery for about two months late next year.  This is perfect for me as it now gives me the whole of this winter to go back to Glen Rosa and start to really plan in more detail how I compose this large piece of work.

Dan, who is based in Seattle, is currently back over in Scotland and on Wednesday he visited my studio again.   After our walks in the spring he created a short 10 minute long film from the footage and recordings he made. ….if you haven’t already seen it then click on the link at the end of the blog.  Apparently he’s had a good response to it and is now keen to develop this into a longer documentary piece.  He asked whether Nita and I would be willing to spend several days with him so that he can shoot more footage.  He is also very interested in using the drawing project as an integral part of the film.  I’m very happy to do this as not only will it be a good way of promoting my work, it will be fun and very interesting too, especially as I’ll hopefully learn a lot more about Dan’s own work.

As he was leaving Irvine on Wednesday evening to travel back to Edinburgh, he asked whether I could find any photos showing some of my early work along with any photographs from some of my early walks.  I don’t really have many such photos to hand but the one above is one taken by my friend Mervin, of Nita and I on Cada Indris in mid Wales in late December 1987 …this was one of the first proper mountain walks Nita had done …we’d only met back in the summer that year.  Great hair, great hat, great day!!!  Not sure if this is really what Dan is after but it made me laugh  when I found it!

To see Dan’s short film ‘Walking with Keith’, follow the link below..

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k33pTg2TnOw

December 1987 Cada Idris, Wales

December 1987 Cada Idris, Wales

At ‘the gallery on the corner’, Edinburgh

'The Saddle from Glen Rosa, Isle of Arran, March'

‘The Saddle from Glen Rosa, Isle of Arran, March’

Last week Nita and I did a trip across to Edinburgh to deliver five paintings to ‘the gallery on the corner’ in Edinburgh. Thankfully it was a dry and bright day and with the aid of our electronic navigator …the occasionally crabbit lady in the sat-nav, we got there without any diversions, scenic detours or upset! We even managed at one point, to go the right way where we normally go the wrong way. This is the point where the crabbit voice in the sat-nav normally starts shouting, ‘re-calculating, recalculating’ and her face …if she had one, would no doubt look decidedly un-amused!

'Harris, west coast, May 2013', Acrylic & Pastel, 2013, 30 x 30 cm

‘Harris, west coast, May 2013’

Travelling to ‘the gallery on the corner’ by this route does however take you over a lengthy section of those eloquent and historic but, when you’re driving over them with a car full of framed and glassed paintings, rather worrying and unpleasant cobbles …this caused my drivers eyes to roll and her to announce (in a gap where the sat-nav wasn’t issuing further instructions) “I hate cobbles”! But we arrived safely, shaken if not on this occasion, stirred and we even found a parking place opposite the gallery …things were looking good.

'Heavy down pour, Harris, May 2013', Acrylic & Pastel,2013, 30 x 30 cm

‘Heavy down pour, Harris, May 2013’

“Looking good” was also the perfect phrase for the work in the gallery. As usual there was a big selection to see by a number of different artists, but the main area was taken up with an exhibition of very interesting landscapes painted on canvas. It was good meeting everyone again and Paul was saying that they had a busy time leading up to Christmas with a full exhibition programme. As such, he reckoned that they’d probably get the new pieces I had just delivered, displayed from early December. They had asked for five pieces including one of the larger ones and so I thought I’d take the relatively new Mam na Gualainn painting to exhibit. I also took; two 30 x 30 cm paintings, one 40 x 40 cm painting and a long thin 76 x 23 cm painting ….all are shown here. Gallery details can be found by following the link to the gallery website at the side of this page. I hope you can get along.

305 'Breaking mists on Mam na Gualainn', Acrylic & Pastel, 2013, 80 x 80 cm

‘Breaking mists on Mam na Gualainn’

So then, if you live in or near Edinburgh or are visiting this beautiful historic city, do call in to see all the work at ‘the gallery on the corner’….you may well find the perfect Christmas present for yourself!

'From Conival, May' Acrylic & Pastel, 2013, 40 x 40 cm

‘From Conival, May’

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Blog 200 ….In the cloud

According to my records, this is Blog number 200 ….and of course, I’m late with it!  No change there, I hear you cry!  Anyway …here we go.

'On Mam na Gualainn, August'

‘On Mam na Gualainn, August’

As some of you will have seen if you’ve been to my Face Book page recently: Keith Salmon – Scottish Landscape Artist; I’ve finished the 80 x 80 cm painting based on our walk on Mam na Gualainn back in the summer.  As I’ve said before, it was a strange day with low banks of clouds drifting in from the west and breaking as they ran into the high hills of Glencoe and the Mamores.  Most of the time the cloud appeared at the side of the hill we were on and then either drifted on by or rose up.  As we sat near the summit however, not only did the glen below us gradually fill up with a great bank of cloud, but the general layer of cloud above us became very thick and dark and started to descend.  As we walked east along the broad ridge, the two almost met and it became very gloomy and dramatic.

This is a scene that I’ve witnessed a good few times over  the many years I’ve been walking in the hills and it never ceases to impress me and I often forget that for people who don’t walk in the hills, this is something they miss.  Indeed, six or seven years ago when I was walking over Shalloch on Minnoch with a group from our local club Air na Creagan, a couple of ladies who had joined us for what was their first ever hill walk ….asked what it was, as the cloud drifted briefly across the hill side ….they were quite taken aback when we said they were walking in the cloud!

But I digress somewhat.  As I was painting the Mam na Gualainn piece, I found it very difficult to capture that strange patchy view that you get when the cloud is just catching the top of the hill but isn’t completely filling in.  Thankfully last Saturday, Nita and I went up to Luss for a relatively short walk up Beinn Dubh and with the weather deteriorating as a weather front moved in from the Atlantic, we had similar conditions to that on Mam na Gualainn.  Once again, banks of cloud seemed to just appear at the side of the hill, at times forming a band around it ….the middle in cloud and the upper and lower slopes cloud free.  It was wonderful to watch this constantly changing scene especially when, as we got higher, the dark overhead layer started to descend and trails of cloud dripped down towards us.  We spent quite a time just standing in the cold wind watching this and it was time well spent.  When I went back to the studio the next day, I knew what I had to do to finish the Mam na Gualainn painting.  It’s all very well taking photos when you’re out ….but they really only act as memory joggers and sometimes not very good ones at that.  What I think you need, to create any painting, is actual experience of the subject……the few hours on Beinn Dubh made all the difference.

As a follow up to this, I’ve decided to try and create some new paintings which are specifically about being in the mist as it breaks around you on the hill.  I’m not sure quite how they’ll go ….I have a feeling that this might be an opportunity to work on a large scale ….but I’ve started quite small …this is a new 30 x 30 cm piece that is on the go.

Work in progress, 'Approaching Am Bodach, the Mamores

Work in progress, ‘Approaching Am Bodach, the Mamores

‘At the summit of Ben Oss, winter’

261-at-the-summit-of-ben-oss-winter-acrylic-pastel-2012-30-x-30-cm

‘At the summit of Ben Oss, winter’

‘At the summit of Ben Oss, winter’, Acrylic & Pastel, 2012, 30 x 30 cm

As I’ve said in my blog this week ….it’s getting a little colder recently and my thoughts are already turning to winter and the prospects of snow on the hills again.  So then, this little picture seemed appropriate.  It is one of several I did based on the memories of reaching the summit of Ben Oss several years ago.  We’d plodded our way up in heavy driving snow but to our delight, as we stood at the top, the snow stopped and the cloud started to break.

This little painting is currently on display at the ‘Scottish Showcase Gallery’ in Kirkcudbright.

‘Below Ben Lui, a cold, damp spring afternoon’

'Below Ben Lui, a cold, damp spring afternoon'

‘Below Ben Lui, a cold, damp spring afternoon’

‘Below Ben Lui, a cold, damp spring afternoon’, Acrylic & Pastel, 2013, 30 x 30 cm

I tend to get drawn back to the Cononish Glen and to Ben Lui on a fairly regular basis.  The two hour long walk to the base of Ben Lui from Tyndrum is a real pleasure in its own right even if you don’t go on to climb the hill.

This new little painting is based on a day a few years ago when we’d planned to walk Ben Lui by its south ridge.  We’d gone with a couple of friends but the conditions where far from good and they weren’t really kitted out for what higher up turned out to be very cold, wet and snowy conditions.  We’d reached the bealach between Ben Oss and Ben Lui but had met the snow at that point and it really didn’t take much thinking about to decide that the prudent course of action was to head back down.  As we once again reached the end of the main track in Cononish Glen and stood right below the main bulk of Ben Lui, a heavy snow shower swept in.  I remember standing there watching the big white snow flakes fall against the dark background of the hill.  It wasn’t a hugely successful walk but that short moment has stuck in my mind and helped make the cold wet day a memorable one.