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Bata Losgadh - cover art work for Söyleşi Üç Aylık Şiir Dergisi

August 24th, 2009 Doug

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My construction ‘Bata Losgadh’ is being used for the cover of the Turkish edition of

The Conversation International Poetry Projects quarterly magazine.

If you want to read the publication, or download a PDF copy go to:

 http://soylesipoetrymagazine.com/download-issues

 

Read the virtual online version at:

 http://issuu.com/conversationpoetry/docs/soylesi1?mode=embed&layout=http://skin.issuu.com/v/light/layout.xml&showFlipBtn=true

 

To Find out more about The Conversation International Poetry Project

visit their website at:

http://conversationipp.com/

 

Söyleşi Üç Aylık Şiir Dergisi is edited by Dr. Nesrin Eruysal

What makes you tick?

August 15th, 2009 Doug

What makes you tick? - introduction text for new website.

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 River Tay (The Tay Whale) - Carved wood / acrylic (detail)

 

I was born and brought up on the east coast of Scotland, and this has had a major influence on my work.  My world at that time had three main lines of influence: the spine of the Sidlaw Hills and the Angus Glens to the north; the city of Dundee, with its port and industries; and the River Tay, from its Highland stretches around Dunkeld and Kenmore to the wide river firth between Angus and Fife.

Like many other artists, writers and musicians, the foundations for the colours and themes I have used in my work were put in place by the environment and experiences of my childhood. I lived in a landscape rich with folklore and traditions, where the footprints and legacy of the previous people who had passed over the land were not only a memory, but a part of everyday life.

As a child, I spent a great deal of time looking into the display cases of the local museums. Many Saturdays and school holidays were occupied in the dimly lit rooms full of local treasures. Pictish stones and objects found in the fields near my home fired my imagination. Relics of the cities whaling industry including beautiful scrimshaw work and personal possessions gave an insight into the lives of people who had shaped the city I grew up in. I believe the occupation of museums,  collecting artifacts and how they were displayed, has had a direct bearing on how I have chosen to create my work. The museum cases have left their mark!

The wide river firth of the Tay had a major part to play in my upbringing. Not only did it provide a workplace at the docks for my father, but it was another great source of ideas and images. Strangely enough, many of these influences stem from the futility of fishing as a young boy with homemade drop lines from the pier at Broughty Ferry.  Hours spent dangling a line into the water hoping that something would bite. Most of the time the hooks were baited with nothing more than homemade milk bottle cap lures, sparkling in the water below the pier.  What I didn’t know was that what I was ‘catching’ was a love of the coastline. The stories of the old fishermen, the history of the river in the Castle Museum, and the colour and mood of the changing river that would be a main part of my artistic vision.

I now travel and exhibit widely around Scotland and the UK, and carry with me the same curiosity and sense of place that I gained growing up on the banks of the Tay. The coast, along with the countryside, still plays an important role in my work. New folklore and traditional tales, similar to the ones I heard as a boy, still inspire me and evoke images and ideas for my art. That wee boy peering into the museum case still lives inside me and is still drawn to finding new treasures in the landscape and imaginations of Scotland.

 

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River Tay (The Tay Whale) - Carved painted wood / Acrylic

Bas Baile (Rotal)

August 14th, 2009 Doug

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 Bas Baile (Rotal)

Carved painted wood / acrylic

Osprey Journal

August 13th, 2009 Doug

The Summer 2009 edition of Osprey Journal features artwork by Douglas Robertson.

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“Osprey”, Scotland’s international online journal of literature, art and ideas. We are bi-annual with editions coming out in winter and summer and our aim is to be a platform for new and emerging writers,artists and thinkers to express their views and feelings towards this ever changing world. I hope you enjoy what you read and see.

 

Osprey is created by poet Grahan Hardie. Visit his website at www.grahamhardie.co.uk

 

Bas Baile (Rotal) - working drawings

August 11th, 2009 Doug

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Sketchbook study for Bas Baile (Rotal) - pencil on paper 2008

 

Currently working in the studio on a series of assemblages based on the theme of emigration.

The works in the sequence ‘Baile’ are inspired by the poem

‘Bas Baile’ (The Death of a Township) by Rev. John MacLeod, written in response to

the departure of 290 emigrants from the Isle of Lewis,

on board the Marloch, in April 1924.

 

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 Working study for Bas Baile (Rotal) - pencil on paper 2008

Like Sleeping Whales

August 8th, 2009 Doug

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 Like Sleeping Whales (detail)

Carved painted wood / Acrylic

Winter Notes

August 8th, 2009 Doug

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Winter Notes (detail)

Carved painted wood / Acrylic

Emigrant (Embark) detail

August 5th, 2009 Doug

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Emigrant (Embark)

August 5th, 2009 Doug

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Douglas Robertson ©2013