Alison Watt

  • Phantom Purchase

    The Herald reports today that the title painting from Alison Watt’s recent National Gallery exhibition, which I saw during my trip to London in May, has been bought by the Gallery of Modern Art in Glasgow. I’m delighted it’ll be on permanent display reasonably close to home.

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  • Sleepers. A fine idea if you can book a berth but a complete misnomer if cash and demand force you into a recliner (read “seat that hardly moves back”) for the eight-hour journey. And my seat on the way down to London was the worst possible option: right next to the door to the toilet

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  • Dark Matters

    I managed to scoot up to the Ingleby Gallery on Thursday to catch Alison Watt‘s installation “Dark Light” on its last day. Her shift from white canvases to black is logical: a further step in the stripping down that is represented by her progression from full-blown portraits to paintings of fabric to paintings of purely

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  • Dark Light

    I’ve mentioned the painter Alison Watt before. There’s an interview with her in today’s Sunday Herald, which is worth reading. I’ve been entranced by her work since I saw her solo exhibition at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art in 2000, and her new piece at the Ingleby Gallery in Edinburgh certainly sounds interesting.

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  • Not that I’m given to watching Sunday morning TV, but I happened to see the art historian Brian Sewell pontificating disdainfully about modern art in churches on BBC 1 this morning. I assume the item, which was part of the Heaven & Earth show, was a brief televisual extension of his BBC Radio 3 show

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