
The Tourism Forum run on 24th September by the Cowalfest team Continue reading

The Tourism Forum run on 24th September by the Cowalfest team Continue reading

This September sees a new show of local artists Continue reading
Who said An Elephant Can’t? The Helensburgh business Continue reading
Not the man himself as he died in 1928, nor the original of the famous portrait of him painted by Vincent Van Gogh – but Cowalfest, Argyll’s October festival of walking and arts, has been granted permission to use images of the famous portrait of Alexander Reid for its exhibition, Alexander Reid and the Japanese Influence – Art, ships and plants.
This is not only a Cowalfest homecoming, it’s a homecoming for Cowal as few know much of Alex Reid beyond his widespread reputation as the Glasgow art dealer who was friendly with and painted by Vincent Van Gogh.
In fact, Reid lived in Dunoon on the Cowal Peninsula for 20 years and for 18 years also served as an Argyll county councillor.
As a keen walker, the affinity of Cowalfest for Alexander Reid is a strong one. He was also a sportsman, artist, entrepreneur, hard bargaining salesman, plausible politician, nurturer and worldwide promoter of Scottish artistic talent, Burns enthusiast, avid collector of Japanese prints, a Francophile described by one of his friends as ‘a perfervid Scot’.
Alex Reid’s story mirrors the times he lived in, with his exuberant yet challenging fin de siècle merging of Glasgow, Paris and Cowal.
His friendships with avant garde artists, his introduction of their works to Scotland, and his vigorous promotion of Scottish artists made him a significant force in Scotland’s cultural standing, giving art in Scotland a close association with that in France and making Scottish art known in Europe and America.
Cowalfest 2009 is both a Homecoming Scotland event and a Japan-UK 150 event in a year of celebrations of the signing of a treaty of friendship and trade between Japan and the UK. This marked the end of Japan’s 250 years of isolation. In its re-emergence as a growing industrial nation, a number of Scots played key roles, with 2009 being the 150th anniversary of Thomas Glover’s arrival in Nagasaki, just as Japan was beginning to open up to the west.
Fraserburgh-born Glover is now known as the Scottish Samurai and was awarded the 2nd highest honour of Japan – the Order of the Rising Sun – by Emperor Meiji in 1908 for his significant contributions to the country’s modernisation.
In bringing both celebrations together, the Cowalfest exhibition provides an intriguing glimpse into the world of Alexander Reid and the connections and cross influences between Scotland and Japan in the latter half of the 19th century and the early years of the 20th.
2009 is the centenary of Reid’s visit to Japan in 1909.The exhibition and the accompanying booklet looks at:
In the years Reid lived in Dunoon, the Cowal Peninsula and the Clyde Estuary were the playground of the rich and royal with connections across the globe. The Japanese connections are no less fascinating by being previously overlooked.
A booklet specially written by exhibition curator, Dorothy Bruce: Alexander Reid and the Japanese Influence : Art, ships and plants, from the Cowalfest Publishing imprint at £4.99 ISBN 978-0-9553312-3-7, will be published in conjunction with the opening of the exhibition on 9th October.
Those who assisted the homecoming passage of Alexander Reid to Cowal
Cowalfest would like to record its thanks to Culture and Sport Glasgow, SCRAN, The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland, Nagasaki University Library, The National Library of Scotland, Consulate General of Japan, The Viscount Weir, Forestry Commission Scotland, Ardkinglas Estate, Argyll & Bute Library Service, Mitchell Library Glasgow, Cowal Camera Club.
Their help and Homecoming Scotland 2009 support from Argyll & Bute Council and Argyll & the Islands Leader has made it possible to bring Alexander Reid home for Cowalfest.
Cowalfest 2009
Cowalfest runs from 9th to 18th October. Its website carries information on the festival’s 86 walks, cycling, horse riding, talks, house tours, drama, Dunoon shop window gallery; and on the exhibition – Alexander Reid and the Japanese Influence – Art, ships and plants.
The images above, of the Van Gogh portrait of Alexander Reid and of Thomas Glover are both out of copyright and are in the public domain.
Gigha’s Gallery is hosting an exhibition – Three Friends – open daily until until the 7th May. It features the paintins of three local artists, Diana Olof, Alan Mills and Dianne Fairweather.
Michael Russell, the new Culture Minister, today (18th February) met representatives from Scotland’s creative industries at Edinburghs Traverse Theatre and immediately took the territory for his own.
He paid generous tribute to his predecessor, Linda Fabiani. He made it clear from the outset that, as he said, the train that is Creative Scotland has left the station and that Scotland will get what it needs in a new enabling body for the the creative sector.
He was equally unambiguous about the tightness of the financial framework the Scottish Government must work within at the moment. At the same time, everything he said demonstrated an understanding, simultaneously intuitive and developed, of the potency, the volatility and the value of the creative.
He dealt briskly but in kindly fashion with a ponderous interrogation from one delegate on the need to protect the making of ‘great art’. We would be less kind and more brisk. This is a death-dealing pretension. Great art happens. It does not respond to intent. Artists set out to create honest art. Sometimes in doing this they are possessed by something from somewhere else and create more than they intend and sometimes more than they know. Lawrence Durrell once said sharply to a precious interviewer: ‘Art is for arting and fart is for farting and that is all there is to it’. And it is.
The podcast below is of the entire event, the Minister’s opening address, the questions from the floor and the Minister’s responses. Listen for yourself.
Jane Rose, whose exhibition – Island Tidelines – opens at Kilmartin House Museum on 1st March 209, will be running a beach litter art workshop the day before – on Saturday 28th February from 10am-11.30am.
At the same time on the same day, Saturday 28th February from 10.00am – 11.30am, Aisa Nebreda from the GRAB Trust will run a workshop for children, making beach litter mobiles to hang in bedrooms or living rooms.
For details, phone: 01546 510 278
This stunning exhibition of life-sized figures made from rope and string recovered from the beaches of Argyll, runs from 18th November to 31st December 2008.
The South Kintyre Art Group is holding its annual Art Market in the Town Hall in Campbeltown from Thursday 27th (10.00am – 9.00pm to coincide with the switch-on of the Campbeltown Christmas lights) – 29th November, opening on both of these days from 10.00am – 5.00pm.
For ArtsFeastCowal this year, officially ArtsFeastCowal2, Philippa Elliott has taken her photography from the inside of Kames Hotel, and put it on the outside of the building. Running from the 20th June onwards, and throughout the summer until the end of September, Philippa’s startling and provocative photos of hunting, shooting and fishing trophies will adorn the hotel’s frontage in a very public exhibit.

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