EAST KILBRIDE is up and coming in the Scottish art stakes. Calderglen
Country Park currently hosts the Scottish Sculpture Open from 9am to
dusk till September 26.
The park also boasts a new permanent sculpture commissioned from Paul
Cosgrove and Keith Rand. Fiona Dean, the third artist-in-residence in a
nine-year programme (Jim Cathcart and John Ferry worked there from 1984)
is making a public sculpture for the Whirlies roundabout and Elspeth
Lamb and Dean are to collaborate on art work for the East Kilbride
village theatre.
Nearby, Scottish Nuclear have invested heavily in top quality for
their stylish new #9m building at Peel Park. The newest piece is a
spectacular and witty water-sculpture of three quirky, questioning heads
by Shona Kinloch which shows that large corporations need not be stuffy
and can even have a sense of humour. In addition an impressive new #1.1m
Arts Centre with large gallery space and studio theatre is due to open
in the old village by Christmas. All in all a very positive contribution
from East Kilbride District Council and Development Corporation.
The Scottish Sculpture Open is now in its seventh year. It is
organised from Lumsden Sculpture Workshop and was first seen in
June/July in the spectacular if distant setting of Kildrummy Castle,
Aberdeenshire. Calderglen is a great chance for the Central Belt to
catch it. One hopes it will become a tradition.
Eighteen artists show one large work each. The sculptures are grouped
around the information centre. Young talent includes Sibylle Von Halem
with a playful small fantasy folly; Arran Ross whose elaborate
polychrome Hawaiian girl carving sits well in the garden arbour and
Marion Smith with a beehive Refuge. Invited sculptors include Doug
Cocker with unexpected Keith Haring-type pegmen joined at the head, Fred
Bushe, Frank Pottinger, and Arthur Watson who needs to come up with a
new idea.
Most memorable is Peter Bevan's Cathedral, a giant white hand held
aloft by a 14ft-tall basket-work classy wood scaffolding, symbolic of
the fragility of gestures of peace and generosity. I also much enjoyed
Frances Pelly's sea-blue stained mermaid right by Cosgrove and Rand's
new sculpture, The Keep.
The Keep is carved from a tree which accidentally got waterlogged and
drowned. When I saw the tree being carved you could see -- and feel --
the water-sodden results. Rand and Cosgrove began separately but
''fancied working in collaboration'' and researched Mains Castle,
Torrance House, and the Mains of Lindsay.
The final idea is based loosely on the town coat of arms. One figure
perches on top of the 35ft tree as though to take a dive and the other
poses by a broch doorway like a farmer leaning on a shovel. Other
anonymous masses and weatherbeaten woodcarvings of a man rowing a boat
and a long fish bench testify to earlier successful artistic efforts in
Calderglen.
Fiona Dean, the current artist in residence, is involved in education
programmes, workshops, and the new northern development area link road
at Stewartfield. ''East Kilbride is wall-to-wall roundabouts. There are
six in close proximity here so it's as well to use them! There's finance
for four so far,'' says Dean. ''I am working with the architects from an
early stage so the work is properly integrated. My first piece, Mi Casa,
Mi Castillo, is tall, linear, and architectural and is almost ready to
be installed by Mains Castle. It's one-inch-thick steel, is four metres
high, and was made at Stockweld in Bellshill.'' She is also planning a
sculpture relating to the history of St Bride opposite the theatre and
related to Lamb's vitreous enamel wall piece.
Shona Kinloch's three four-and-a-half-ton heads for the water feature
in the pond at Scottish Nuclear were cast at Edinburgh's Powderhall
Bronze. I saw them there, some in 12 sections, before their green
patination, and marvelled at their size. Inevitably sited in front of
this handsome glass building they've shrunk considerably despite their
crowning fish spouting water in arcs. This is Kinloch's best piece yet:
large-scale, ambitious, yet with no loss of quirky sparkle. One head is
posing the question; one is dubious; and the third -- ?. Go see what you
think.
Kinloch, now 30, graduated from Glasgow in 1985. She caught the public
eye with her Glasgow Garden Festival Dogs and a major figure for the
Italian Centre. Now with this sculpture she has reached another rung on
the ladder.
Other art work outside Scottish Nuclear are Jim Ritchie's three
upright metal and granite monoliths, while inside in the atrium are two
oil paintings by Jack Knox (one unusually of Standing Stones against an
orange sunset, the other dark starry seascape more characteristic), and
a vivid vermilion wool hanging by Adrian Wiszniewski made at Edinburgh's
Dovecot.
The dining-room features an enormous and intricate ''fishy'' carving
by Martin Rayner. Rayner lives by the sea at Newport and fish, a boat
hull, and many other marine references are contained in six rich,
decorative polychrome panels.
Victoria Cassidy's work is also highly decorative but while Rayner is
bouncily extrovert in an attractive but loud fairground macho kind of
way, Cassidy plays a stringed instrument rather than a brass band.
Elegant, soigne, definitely feminine, her gentle drifts of pale azure
and violet touched with gold are irresistible. Her work is also
incredibly detailed (what eyesight, what patience!) and has long
featured astrology, maps, and signs of the zodiacs.
Her new exhibition at the Compass Gallery, An Egyptian Diary, is the
result of a visit to the sands and lands of the ancient Pharaoh. Using
the age-old emblems of Osiris and Isis she conjures subtle pattern and
texture. Her technique ''manipulating watercolour like veils of silk,''
is extraordinary. However, I do wish she would rely less on well-known
symbols and try inventing her own.
Last chance to see George Walton at Glasgow Art Gallery. This is a
terrific show of the Glasgow designer and architect who was a friend and
colleague of Mackintosh.
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