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The Ochil’s | Scottish Landscape Art - Scottish Landscape Paintings

Posts Tagged ‘The Ochil’s’

‘Fresh snow, January 1st 2013, the Ochil’s’

16 'Fresh snow, January 1st 2013, the Ochils', Acrylic & pastel, 2013, 30 x 30 cm

‘Fresh snow, January 1st 2013, the Ochils’

‘Fresh snow, January 1st 2013, the Ochil’s’, Acrylic & pastel, 2013, 30 x 30 cm

I did this small painting last year after we visited the Ochil Hills on a particularly fine New Years Day.  The view looks past the slopes of Craighorn which we descended for the first time last Sunday and it makes a fine route off of the hill.  This painting is currently hanging in my studio and is for sale, priced £485.

To read more about our recent visit to these fine small hills, click this link to my latest blog which includes four photos taken that day.

‘Fresh snow, January 1st 2013, the Ochil’s’

‘Fresh snow, January 1st 2013, the Ochil’s’

‘Fresh snow, January 1st 2013, the Ochil’s’

‘Fresh snow, January 1st 2013, the Ochil’s’, Acrylic & Pastel, 2013, 30 x 30 cm

You may remember we spent our New Years Day walking in the Ochil Hills.  It was perfect conditions with the higher slopes whitened with a light covering of fresh snow.  A mixture of heavy clouds and bright sunny breaks made for beautiful subtle light and colours.  This small painting is my first attempt at trying to capture a little of that day.

Seven drawings

1-early-morning-rannoch-moor-graphite-stick-on-paper-2013

‘Early morning, Rannoch Moor’

Earlier this week I took the seven new graphite drawings down to my framer in Prestwick. I’ve asked them to mount the drawings only as there won’t be enough space in the gallery to hang them. The drawings though will be on display in a stand and will be available for sale should anyone take a fancy to any of them.

It’s now about 07.15 and I’m rushing to get things completed on this computer as I have to get down to the studio quite early today. Over the last few weeks or so I’ve been posting odd photos of some of the drawings but I thought I’d take this opportunity to show them all together. Of course this has the advantage that I don’t have to write much this morning ….it’s one of those ‘picture blogs’ this week! Anyway, I hope you find them of interest.

2-east-over-rannoch-moor-early-morning-graphite-stick-on-paper-2013

‘East over Rannoch Moor, early morning’

They’re all done on thick off white paper …I think it was 220 g paper and I’ve used soft graphite pencils scribbled down in over lapping layers. I’ve also cut back through the dark areas using a soft rubber and have tried to control some of these marks by light applications of fixative at points throughout the drawing process. They are all A2 size, so not huge …but I think they may well deserve to be taken to a much larger scale.

This is just a thought at present but it would be nice to do something on the scale of the large drawing I did when I was in Speyer in the summer of 2010. That drawing was just over 4 m long by 1.5 m high! It would certainly mean using a lot of graphite sticks.

Anyway, here are the rest of the drawings ….if you can get along to see them for real they’ll be on display at ‘the gallery on the corner’, 34 Northumberland St, Edinburgh EH3 6LS throughout March. The gallery is open, Tues – Sat, 11.00 – 17.00. I must dash now…..

3-east-from-ba-cottage-early-morning-graphite-stick-on-paper-2013

‘East from Ba cottage, early morning’

4-fresh-snow-the-ochils-graphite-stick-on-paper-2013

‘Fresh snow, the Ochils’

5-winter-patterns-beinn-dorain-graphite-stick-on-paper-2013

‘Winter patterns, Beinn Dorain’

6-winter-slopes-blackmount-graphite-stick-on-paper-2013

‘Winter slopes, Blackmount’

7-in-the-luss-hills-graphite-stick-on-paper-2013

‘In the Luss hills’

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Looking for paintings

Cononish Glen

Cononish Glen

It’s been a week of painting for the most part.  As I think I’ve said before, I’ve been invited to hold an exhibition of my work at ‘the gallery on the corner’ in Edinburgh during March.  The exhibition preview is on Friday March 1st and the show will run until the end of the month.  I’m looking at providing around 17 pieces of work for the exhibition including a good selection of the smaller acrylic & pastel paintings.  After three months of quite good sales in the lead up to Christmas, it’s meant that I’m a little short of the smaller paintings now and I’ve been working on some new pieces recently.  I’ve completed four 30 x 30 cm paintings and have several more on the go.  I’m also working on a couple new 76 x 23 cm paintings too.  All of these are based on our most recent walks, to Rannoch Moor, The Ochil’s and I’m hoping, from the walk we did in Cononish Glen yesterday.  On each of these walks we’ve had superb conditions creating beautiful colours, patterns and contrasts.  Each day was different but very atmospheric in its own right.  The latest small piece to be completed is based on the view we had looking across from the Ghlas Beinn ridge towards Achaladair a few weeks ago.  Needless to say, it was cold and as we wandered along the broad grassy ridge a line of low cloud crept along the glen below us.  This painting is my current ‘Work of the week’, ….just click on the ‘Home’ link to see it.

Cloud breaking around the base of Ben Lui

Cloud breaking around the base of Ben Lui

Our walk yesterday had similar conditions, except that we were down in the base of the glen, (Cononish Glen) and the banks of cloud and mist were drifting along at different levels, some at ground level, some higher, skirting around the hillsides like a tide-line.  It made for strange and interesting scenes.

Below Ben Oss

Below Ben Oss

I had actually planned this easy walk for quite a time, hoping to see the main big corrie on Ben Lui close up and under snow.  But of course, the best made plans and all that!  Instead of snow covered mountains as I’d hoped for in early January, we found almost no snow.  The exceptionally mild conditions since New Years Day had meant a rapid and almost complete thaw, leaving just a few obstinate patches high up on most of the bigger hills and none whatsoever on the smaller ones.  This said however, Ben Lui is one of the bigger mountains and rises to around 1100 m and its huge and magnificent corrie does face east …or north east ..I’ll have to check the map!  But whatever the exact direction, it does mean that the corrie and the big gullies leading up from it, do tend to hold on to their snow a good deal longer than elsewhere.  This was the case yesterday and although there wasn’t much snow, the big gullies leading up from the corrie into cloud and towards the summit, were still full and created a marvellous pattern against the dark rock of the upper mountain.

Below Ben Lui

Below Ben Lui

Our walk yesterday was really just one for looking, taking a few photos and trying to come up with ideas for new work.  It normally takes us just under two hours to walk from Tyndrum up Cononish Glen to the end of the estate track directly below the bulk of Ben Lui …the point where normally we’d ford the stream and start heading up.  Yesterday though, we took nearer three hours!  There was no rush and we could just wander along taking in the wonderful changing scene before us as the banks of mist and cloud came and went, sometimes dark and threatening, at other times,  light, wispy and translucent as it moved across the hillside caught in a brief shaft of sunlight.  Strangely, although I was hoping to get ideas for new paintings, I actually came away with ideas for some new graphite drawings!  Not quite what was planned, but if there’s one thing I’ve learnt over the years, it’s that you have to be flexible!  After a great little walk, now all I have to do, is the work.

Looking east from Cononish

Looking east from Cononish

Beinn Chuirn

Beinn Chuirn

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