Tuesday 31 July 2012

We're in residence at Caol Ruadh... with Freda Waldapfel


ARTIST IN RESIDENCE: ARGYLL STYLE
Tighnabruaich Gallery @ 
THE BOAT HOUSE, CAOL RUADH SCULPTURE GARDEN, COLINTRAIVE
Until August 31 
Freda in The Boat Shed at Caol Ruadh... well worth a visit


We have been making waves with our new pop-up gallery in an old Boat Shed at recently-opened Caol Ruadh Sculpture Garden in Colintraive, Argyll.
For the last few weeks, Argyll-based artist Freda Waldapfel, has been drawing inspiration from the beautiful surroundings on the shores of the Kyles of Bute in which the old Boat Shed has a stunning vantage point.
Now Freda is set to be the Boat House’s first ever Artist in Residence, painting in the shed as visitors drop in for a look.
Tighnabruaich Gallery held an exhibition of Freda’s delicately nuanced, hugely colourful, paintings in the Boat House during a recent Scotland’s Gardens scheme open weekend and the artist was so taken with the space that gallery owners, Andrew and Penny Graham-Weall invited her to take up residence until the end of August.
Andrew commented: “Freda will be Artist in Residence, in the Boat House for the next two weeks. She’ll be painting her beautiful oil and watercolours on the premises and will be delighted to chat to all visitors.
“Penny and I love her work and it has proved very popular with visitors. In her Lumina series of oil paintings she is trying to capture that elusive, exciting quality of luminosity which the garden has just before dusk.

“The painter, Bonnard, called it l'heure bleu. The effect is really quite magical.”
Frida adds: “My work is all about colour, colour, colour, Space, light, air, gardens, flowers and unashamed optimism. I’m always seeking the poetry of it all. Not the prose.
“I’m delighted to be taking up residence here. In fact, I can’t imagine a better temporary home! ”
The Boat House at Caol Ruadh
You can read more at Freda's lively and rather lovely blog: 
http://livesimplysimplylive.weebly.com/index.html 

Caol Ruadh Sculpture Park, Colintraive, Argyll, PA22 3AR
Tel: 07771 996656
www.scottishsculpturepark.com
Wed: Sun 11am-6pm
Tues: By appointment only
Mon: CLOSED
Tighnabruaich Gallery, Argyll, PA21 2DR
Tel: 01700 811681
www.tig-gallery.com
For further information or images please contact: 
Andrew or Penny Graham-Weall on 01700 811681 or andrew@tig-gallery.com 

Tuesday 12 June 2012

Printastic Heather Nevay

We are proud of our connection with Heather Nevay, an artist who divides her time between Tighnabruaich and Glasgow, when she's not jetting off to London and Miami for her own exhibition openings.

A Cloud of Ruddy Hue (570mm X 705mm) £580

Heather's work is highly sought after and in the last decade, she has developed a cult following.

As the writer and filmmaker, James Burge, says of her work: Heather Nevay's paintings shock at first sight. She employs a repertoire of images that appear to have found their way to us from Hieronymus Bosch via classic cinematic horror."

Whenever we have her original work in the gallery, it never hangs around for long – such is the demand for Heather's paintings. 

So, we are delighted to be able to present for the first time ever, a series of limited edition digital prints of Heather's work.

The quality is stunning and we think Heather's many fans will be impressed by these affordable yet beautiful prints.

Each is printed in a limited edition of 25 and is signed and numbered by Heather. It also comes with a certificate of authentication. prices are for the unmounted print but dark stained wood frames, designed and approved by the artist, can also be supplied.



PLEASE CALL OR EMAIL FOR DETAILS:
TIGHNABRUAICH PA21 2DR
T: 01700 PA21 2DR
E: andrew@tig-gallery.com


The Poyson'd Cloud (410mm X 505mm) £500


Flesch Hook (465 X 595mm) £450



Thursday 26 April 2012

Monday 23 April 2012

Jacqueline Orr & Sian MacQueen


Jacqueline Orr & Sian MacQueen 

Spring Sail by Jacqueline Orr RSW



Tighnabruaich Gallery
Argyll, PA21 2DR
May 12 – June 1
t: 01700 811681
e: andrew@tig-gallery.com
w: www.tig-gallery.com

TWO award-winning Argyll-based artists are set to exhibit together for the first time in the village of Tighnabruaich, which is fast becoming the holiday destination of choice for Britain’s Staycationers.
Both Jacqueline Orr and Sian MacQueen have been inspired by the dramatic surroundings of Argyll to create a whole new body of work which reflects their love of the area. The joint exhibition of their work will take place at The Tighnabruaich Gallery from May 12 – June 1.
Both artists are fairly recent elected members of the prestigious Royal Scottish Society of Painters in Watercolours, a peer-led honour they share with famous artists such as Dame Elizabeth Blackadder and Barbara Rae.
Our approach to painting seems to be completely different, yet entirely complimentary,” says Jacqueline, who trained at Glasgow School of Art under Scottish painting greats such as James D. Roberston, Barbara Rae and John Cunningham.
She adds: “My work is all recent and based on the landscape around Loch Fyne and the Kyles of Bute, near where I live. I've been painting and drawing in this area on and off for about five years, especially at Tighnabruaich. 
“This is the first time since moving to Argyll nearly seven years ago that I've spent the whole winter here and despite the poor weather, I've been stunned by the light on the few good days that we've had over the winter.   
“My normal palette tends to be either bright or veering towards dark, but I've been drawn to the beautiful, pale, winter colours you find here when it hasn't been raining. Even when it has been raining, the colours have still been fabulous. 
“The challenge has been to capture the essence of the landscape through the incredible colours and shapes that are only visible during the winter and spring months.”
Sian MacQueen is one of the youngest members of Royal Scottish Society of Painters in Watercolour (RSW) and in February this year, won the Winsor and Newton award at its annual exhibition at the Royal Scottish Academy in Edinburgh.

Having trained as a sculptor at Glasgow School of Art, Sian returned to painting while running her own framing business at Kilmartin in Argyll and uses her knowledge of materials to create her uniquely textured works.
She explains: “My research into my genealogy, which has included finding a tailor and shoemaker from the Small Isles, has given me a fantastic source of narrative for my most recent work. I’m also inspired by texture and enjoy simple abstract compositions that I use to try and create a visual excitement in my paintings.
“I paint with acrylic on gesso which I scrape, sand, rub and score until I find what I’m looking for.”
Pear Picnic by Sian MacQueen


Tighnabruaich Gallery, Argyll, PA21 2DR
t: 01700 811681
@Tiggallery
For further information or hi-res images please contact: 
Penny or Andrew Graham-Weall on andrew@tig-gallery.com

Monday 12 March 2012

Tighnabruaich travels to new Glasgow Art Show


Tighnabruaich Gallery 
@ Glasgow Art Show
23 - 25 March 2012
The Grand Ballroom, Thistle Glasgow
Cambridge Street, Glasgow, G2 3HN
PRESS INFORMATION
March 7, 2012
Alchemists in an Industrial Landscape by
Heather Nevay. On sale for £4,800 with
Tighnabruaich Gallery at Glasgow Art Show

The Argyll-based Tighnabruaich Gallery is bringing the work of artist Heather Nevay back to her home city for the new Glasgow Art Show, after her critically acclaimed solo show in Miami, Florida.
Heather, who has a second home in the village of Tighnabruaich, has developed close links with the gallery in the last couple of years.
The artist’s recent hit exhibition, Flesch and Blood, at Miami’s 101/exhibit gallery featured her signature rose-toned Flemish-style pre-teen figures engaged in sinister childhood games. More than half the work was reserved by the time the exhibition opened last month.
Heather’s highly collectable work was a regular fixture at the Glasgow Art Fair, which took place annually in the city’s George Square until 2010. 
Her distinctive paintings, collected by fans worldwide, now routinely sell for four-figure sums. 
The Argyll-based gallery is bringing two of Heather’s sought-after original oil paintings to the all-new Glasgow Art Show; one called Alchemists in an Industrial Landscape and the other Belovd.
The Tighnabruaich Gallery is one of 41 galleries selected to exhibit at the brand new Glasgow Art Show, which takes place in the Thistle Hotel, Glasgow from March 23-25.
As well as Heather’s work, the gallery will be bringing the work of sought-after Scots artists such as, Gordon Wilson, Charlie O’Sullivan, Ingeborg Smith, Tommy Fitchet and Kevin Fleming.
They will also be showcasing the unique watercolours of Northumberland-based artist, MJ (Matt) Forster. This will be the first time this self-styled ‘Ãœberpainter’ has been shown in Scotland.
According to Matt, Ãœberpaintings are ‘designed rather than painted’. 
“An Ãœberpainting cannot be created within one painting,’ he adds. ‘They have to be developed. This can take weeks to achieve a satisfactory image.”
Penny Graham-Weall of the Tighnabruaich Gallery comments: “We are delighted to be exhibiting at the first ever Glasgow Art Show. It’s vitally important for galleries like ours to be able to bring our artists to a bigger audience and this offers a great opportunity for all concerned.”
Tighnabruaich Gallery, Argyll, PA21 2DR
Tel: 01700 811681
www.tiggallery.blogspot.com
Glasgow Art Show opening hours:
Thursday 22nd March 2012: 18.30 - 21.30
Preview Evening & Wine Reception Ticket Only 
Friday March 23: 11.00 - 18.00 - £6 Concessions £4
Saturday March 24: 11.00 - 18.00 - £6 Concessions £4
Sunday March 25: 11.00 - 17.00 - £6 Concessions £4
Tickets available on the door
Admission price is for a weekend pass allowing unlimited access to the show
Finding Peace by Charlie O'Sullivan. On sale with Tig Gallery
at Glasgow Art Show for £1,795 





This is Western Isles (watercolour) by MJ Forster, price TBC

Daisy Diver by Ingebjorg Smith - £330  (25x29cm)















For further information or images please contact: 
Penny Graham-Weall on penny@tig-gallery.com 

Monday 5 March 2012

Heather Nevay


HEATHER NEVAY

Here at the the Tighnabruaich Gallery, we are very lucky to be able to exhibit the work of one of Scotland's most sought after painters, Heather Nevay. The way Heather paints is so detailed and exacting that producing work is a highly charged creative yet labour-intensive process. So, when paintings come to the gallery, they don't linger for long.

Heather has an army of faithful fans who collect her work.

She recently had a hugely successful exhibition in Miami, which was almost sold-out by the time it opened.

Heather and her partner John have a house in Tighnabruaich and are frequent visitors. A welcome addition to the lively social scene in this beautiful corner of Argyll...

Up until now, Heather's work hasn't been available in print form, but we have been working with Glasgow-based design company, Deadly Digital, to produce a stunning set of affordable digital prints. Also on sale will be a limited edition 'black book' of Heather's work. It's priced at £60 and it's a thing of beauty. A keepsake to last a lifetime...

Please contact the gallery for more information.

This painting, Alchemists in Industrial Landscape, is coming with is to the new Glasgow Art Show, which is taking place at the Thistle Hotel in Glasgow on the weekend of March 23-25. Keep reading this blog and checking our website, facebook and twitter accounts for more information over the next few weeks.



New Alchemists in Industrial Landscape byHeather Nevay (this painting will be on sale at our stand at Glasgow Art Show from March 23-25 - see www.glasgowartshow.com for more details)

The following feature by Jan Patience appeared in Homes & Interiors Scotland magazine a couple of years ago.

This Life: Heather Nevay
As seen in issue 62 of Homes & Interiors Scotland magazine
By Jan Patience

In Heather Nevay’s work, every picture tells a story. In her maker’s mind, the characters and the story are clear-cut, but for the beholder, each painting it is an open book, waiting to take on a life of its own. 

Given the finely tuned sense of composition, colour and design inherent in Heather’s paintings, coupled with a fantastical imagination at work, it is no surprise to find her eyrie-like flat across the top floor of a Glasgow tenement throws away the modern interior design rule book, yet works in the most spectacular fashion.

Heather and her partner John Burke have lived in the same building in Glasgow’s west end for over 20 years, but 11 years ago, following a fire in the roof top flat a few floors further up when six student occupants had to be airlifted out by helicopter, they decided to make an offer on it and move up in the world.

“We knew that the landlord would not be able to let it out again for health and safety reasons,” she explains, “so we decided to make an early offer.

“I needed more room to work and we loved living in the area. It’s close to great shops, bars and restaurants in the west end and within walking distance of town. The views out over the rooftops to the Campsie Hills are special too.”

When the couple moved in, they had their work cut out. Not only had the interior been fire-damaged, but years of neglect and abuse had taken its toll on the fabric of the L-shaped apartment, which Heather thinks may have been used originally as servants’ quarters when the Victorian tenement was first built.

“It was dark and gloomy,” she adds. “There were horrible smelly carpets in the bathroom and the kitchen and there was no heating at all. 

Early on, we had to decide what room was what as all four rooms had been used as bedrooms. 

“Initially, the room we now use as a little sitting room was a dining room, with the large lounge as the place we tended to sit in the evening.

“I also had my studio in the room which is now our bedroom, but a few years ago, we swapped things around and my studio is now at one end of the large room we had as a bedroom. I love to base myself around a window and that works as I paint at one end and we use the other part of the room as a guest bedroom.”

The flat has been a work in progress since they moved in, with the couple playing to their own individual strengths. As a civil engineer, John was able to deal with practical structural challenges, such as when they knocked through a wall in search of a chimneybreast and exposed more wall to the world than they had intended. 

To tie in with Heather’s aim of ‘not having a fitted kitchen’, he created and customised the cabinetry in the kitchen. An old wardrobe has been painted and fitted with mouldings from B&Q to create more storage space. Elsewhere, on the wall connecting the hall and the lounge, he has installed a small porthole bought in a chandlery. Around the recess window’s, he has built shutters to preserve heat.

Heather likes to be surrounded by things not found in homes up and down the land. “There’s nothing wrong with buying furniture from IKEA, it’s just that it’s not for me,” she says. “We couldn’t afford to buy really expensive one-offs, so our leather sofas in the lounge, for example, were bought for next-to-nothing from classified ads in the local paper.

“I found the small green and white floral sofa and chair in the sitting room on Great Western Road in Glasgow, about to be lifted by the cleansing department. I called John to come back from work at lunchtime so he could lift it up to the flat with me. 

“He’s very fastidious and was literally holding it at arms length because it was in such a disgusting state, but it was so jaunty I knew if I cleaned it up, had it reupholstered and covered, it’d look fantastic. And it does.”

Heather, whose degree from Glasgow School of Art, was in printed textiles, has honed her interior design eye over the years to master many new skills, including plastering a fireplace surround and mixing wallpaper paste and yellow paint to create a vivid backdrop for the lounge and the hall. 

Her talent as an arranger of seemingly disparate objects is always to the fore, be it in the clever use of painted wooden chairs half way up the kitchen wall as extra shelving, or her humorous take of plonking her friend’s mum’s wedding tiara atop the bust of a little boy salvaged from a chemist where he’d been used as part of advertising campaign. In the lounge, hanging on a wooden screen on the living room, she has a pair of exquisite Chinese watercolour palettes she picked up in a market in Islington. She has customised the upper part of the palette with circular digital copies of two of her paintings. 

In every corner of this apartment, from kitchen, to bathroom to lounge and hallway, there is something to hold your attention. Heather admits she is not keen on cupboards, so her world is on display in what feels like a living, breathing very well lived-in theatrical set. It’s not everyone who could get away with having a salvaged statuette of Jesus on a velvet-draped plinth with some nice artificial flowers on his head, but here, it works.

Everything in this house, be it artefact, icon, ornament, foliage, painting or stuffed animal in a glass case (of which there are many), has its own story, from the first ever stuffed animal she bought – an early Victorian version of the King Charles spaniel – to the most recent purchase; an antelope with impossibly twisted horns dating back to 1922.

Currently sitting on a chair in its glass case, Heather says she is unsure of the perfect position for this once wild beast, and it is this approach which sets her home apart from other interiors, where such a feast of detail would become simply a guddle in need of a good dusting.

The couple don’t have children of their own, but Heather’s sister’s children ‘love coming up here’ she declares. “They head straight for the stuffed animals. What they like – and what I love too – is the fact that normally you wouldn’t get so close to them. I mean, where would you normally see a badger? The other good thing is that they’re not difficult pets!”

As well as the stuffed animals, Heather and John also share their home with a pair of life-sized plaster sheep, made by the acclaimed Scottish sculptor, Angela Hunter. Heather and Angela swapped work a few years back and one stands in the lounge by a window, while its mate is in the couple’s bedroom, seemingly gnawing on a piece of foliage hanging above the bed.

As you would expect, the walls groan with original art, most of it by Heather, spanning the 20 years since she left art school. There are early figurative paintings in acrylic as well as the more recent unsettling oils of vignettes of children at play, and several examples of her exquisite hand drawn figures on paper.

In the lounge, she has work by other artists, including an original Jack Vettriano. A few years back, Heather exchanged work with the Fife-born painter, whose work now routinely sells for five figure sums. There is also a small painting by Glasgow-based Peter 

Thompson, with whom Heather recently exhibited at Glasgow’s Mansfield Park Gallery alongside Thompson’s wife Helen Flockhart. The specially commissioned painting of a Celtic/Rangers football match in Peter’s distinctive highly detailed style was a 40th birthday present for John – an avid Celtic fan.

The hub of the house is Heather’s studio, which like all artists’ spaces is highly personal. Postcards, posters and tear sheets from magazines of figures or faces cover the wall around the inset window. Many are from the Italian Renaissance era, a period that continues to be a constant inspiration in her work. Heather is often to be found in here until late at night, with Radio 4 or a Talking Book for company as she paints. 

To the outsider, this space might seem like an essay in ordered chaos, but to Heather it provides constant inspiration – a window on her alternative universe.
WHAT HEATHER LIKES
• I’m always rooting about in antique shops and auction houses. My favourite ones are Great Western Auctions and Authentics in Glasgow’s west end and The Thrie Estaits in Edinburgh. If any of them have something they know I’ll like, they call me.
•  The Mexican painter Frida Kahlo has been an inspiration for many years. Some people have drawings their kids have done on the fridge. I have a picture of Frida.
•  The Renaissance period in painting fascinates me and informs my work. I particularly like the work of the German painter Lucas Cranach and Hans Memling, a 15th century Flemish painter.
•  The flat is crammed with stuffed animals, but my favourite has to be the first one I bought – the wee King Charles spaniel, with his jaunty red bow and impossibly tiny jaw. Though I do like my otter in the studio. 
 As soon as I spotted a wood carving of a seated figure folding its arms to its chest in the Thrie Estates, I knew I had to have it. It dates back to Tudor times and it’s my favourite object in our house. We keep it in our bedroom.
•  If we ever have any time out, we head to Tighnabruaich, which is a couple of hour’s drive away from Glasgow. 
•  Our favourite restaurant and bar is Stravaigin, which is just a walk away from us on Gibson Street, in Glasgow’s west end.
•  I love New York, but Italian cities inspire me in every way. John’s mum is from Naples, so that is a great excuse to visit – and we love Italian food.

Friday 3 February 2012

Spring in our step...

Well, that's January and black Mondays/Wednesdays (delete as appropriate) over and done with and we have a sniff of spring in the air!

If you're city-bound, take a moment to drink in this breathtaking view of the famous wreck on Ettrick Bay on  the beautiful island of Bute. This is one of Andrew's photographs which we have in the gallery.

Ettrick Bay by Andrew Graham Weall


Here in the gallery, we're also enjoying the work of Pam Carter, John Wetten Brown and Caroline Bailey, as well as gallery favourites such as Jan Nelson, Jolomo, Tommy Fitchet and Stuart Herd.


Sun Above Tighnabruaich, mixed media, by Caroline Bailey



We're also planning ahead for a busy year. We'll be showing this year at the new Glasgow Art Show in March, the new Knutsford Art Fair in September and the Edinburgh Art Fair in November. plus we hope to revisit Guildford High School again in the Autumn.

We also have over 50 pictures at The Royal An Lochan Hotel in Tighnabruaich which has a new chef with a delicious new menu.

Take a look at their website here: The Royal An Lochan Hotel in Tighnabruaich






GLASGOW-BOUND...

We're particularly excited about exhibiting at new Glasgow Art Show, a new initiative, which is being held from March 23-25 in The Grand Ballroom of the Thistle Hotel, Cambridge Street, Glasgow, G2 3HN.

We will be showcasing the work of Northumberland-based watercolour artist, Matt Forster, Annette Edgar, Tommy Fitchet, Ingeborg Smith and Charlie O'Sullivan (to name but a few...)

Treedance Mauritius by Annette Edgar (Oil/Board.76x86cms) 
Here's the Glasgow Art Show's website: http://www.arteineuropa.com/glasgow/

GLASGOW ART SHOW
March 23-25 
The Grand Ballroom 
Thistle Hotel, Cambridge Street, Glasgow, G2 3HN.

Opening Hours
Preview evening: Thursday 22nd March 2012: 18.30 - 21.30
(email us if you are interested in preview tickets - limited number available)



Friday 23rd March 2012: 11.00 - 18.00 - £6 Concessions £4
Saturday 24th March 2012: 11.00 - 18.00 - £6 Concessions £4
Sunday 25th March 2012: 11.00 - 17.00 - £6 Concessions £4


Monday 16 January 2012

Beating Blue Monday

 Beacon in the Blues, oil by Pam Carter, £5,500

Blowing in the Blue, oil by Pam Carter, £2600

Blairs Ferry Cottages, Kames, gouache by John Wetton Brown, £315

Drinishader, Harris, gouache by John Wetton Brown, £495

Sun Above Tighnabruaich by Caroline Bailey

Exhibitions

New Year Show
Pam Carter, Caroline Bailey & John Wetton Brown

14th Jan - 15th Mar
Three of our favourite artists have some stunning work for you to see in the gallery and online now. These will blow away the new year cobwebs as we head up to what has been dubbed Blue Monday by the Daily Mail. Yes, it's true, next Monday, January 23 is officially Blue Monday. For is, the opposite is true. We like nothing better than a cobalt blue seascape and with this in mind...
On show now, we have recent seascapes and new work by Pam Carter, some quirky gouache cartoon like pictures by John Wetton Brown and fabulous abstract work of Tighnabruaich and the Kyles of Bute by Caroline Bailey.
For more information, call the gallery on 01700 811681 or email andrew@tig-gallery.com