The Edinburgh Reporter November 2023

(EdinReporter) #1

19


CULTURE • LITERATURE • ART • EVENTS • MUSIC • MUSEUMS...


By STAFF REPORTER

MORE THAN 130 artworks have been selected
to be displayed in two galleries, at the City Art
Centre. The chosen works reflect all dimensions
of natural and/or man-made environments
including works that are imaginary, surreal,
abstract, documentary, ecological and realistic
across a wide range of media – from painting,
sculpture, drawing and miniatures, to film,
animation, audioscapes and virtual reality.
With a £27,000 prize fund, the awards
welcomed entries from anyone over 16 years old,
born, living or studying in Scotland, irrespective
of their level of experience.
The first prize, the Lapeca Scottish
Landscape Award of £10,000 is open to
works in any medium, as is the second prize
of £5,000 donated by the Robert Haldane
Smith Foundation.
This year’s awards also includes The City of
Edinburgh Award of £5,000 for the top work
depicting any aspect of the city in any media.
The winning work will become part of the City
of Edinburgh’s permanent collection.
The Scottish Landscape Award for
Environmental Art, is another major award
open to works in any medium, with a £3,
prize donated by the Cruden Foundation.

Friends of the City Art Centre and Edinburgh
Museums have donated £1,000 for the Scottish
Landscape Award in Photography. Whilst Irene
Adams OBE is supporting the £1,000 Young
Landscape Artist Award, which will be given to
the top work entered in any medium by an artist
aged 16 to 25 years.
Barbara Rae, CBE, RA, Chair, Scottish
Landscape Awards Panel said: “We wanted to see
something that arrested us with its skill, insight,
humour, sensitivity – to see work that spoke to a
truth, to a dream, to microscopic realities or vast
surreal worlds. We hoped to find work that
pushed the very boundaries of contemporary
landscape art, and we were not disappointed.”
David Patterson, City Art Centre’s Curatorial
and Conservation Manager said: “We are
thrilled to have been selected as the venue for
the first-ever Scottish Landscape Awards
exhibition. From the outset, our vision matched
the ambitions of the Scottish Arts Trust in
wanting to challenge the traditional notion of
landscape painting. We’re genuinely pleased with
the variety and quality of artworks selected by
the judges, as well as the high calibre of artists
who submitted their work. I believe visitors will
leave the gallery thoroughly impressed, given the
exceptional standard and diversity of the
exhibited pieces.”

Landscapes at


City Art Centre


Summerhall Big


Christmas Weekend


Looking back in time this November...


Compiled by Jerry Ozaniec, Membership Secretary of the
Old Edinburgh Club. E: [email protected]

SUMMERHALL will host its
first Summerhall Big
Christmas Weekend from
1 to 3 December.
The Big Weekend will be
spread out all over
Summerhall and will build on
the popularity of its annual
Christmas Market - 90 stalls
of locally curated businesses
will make for a bigger, better,
and even more festive
atmosphere for all to enjoy.
A full weekend of
Christmas creativity and fun
for the local community,
Summerhall’s Big Christmas
Weekend will include events,
activities, performance and
stalls. Highlights will be
Adrenalism Theatre’s A Very
Crypto Christmas (with
Christmas Karaoke and bar
service); Crispmas
Confessional; Après Ski Bar
with raclette and German
beer; Carol Singing from
Summerhall’s very own
community choir; a Friday
night Christmas Ceilidh in

collaboration with The
Edinburgh Ceilidh Club; and
Wreath Making with Ollie
and Ivy using locally and
sustainably sourced
materials - as well as a
wide range of high quality
food and mulled wine and
cider vendors.
Entry for everyone will be
£3 and free for Under 18s, for
a full weekend of Christmas
creativity where special gifts
can be bought and made,
culture enjoyed, and the
festive spirit found at
every corner.
Summerhall Events
Manager Steph Leach said:
“Summerhall’s Christmas
Market has always been
popular, but every year we
want to make it bigger and
better so we can showcase
even more local talent and
makers. We are calling this
year’s programme our Big
Christmas Weekend to really
encapsulate how much there
is to enjoy! We were keen to

make this year a bit different
by working with multiple
local organisations and
offering more than just
a market.
We’ve been really lucky in
finding lots of amazing
collaborators to work with
this year, like The Edinburgh
Ceilidh Club, Ollie and Ivy,
and Adrenalism Theatre, as
well as increasing our
available capacity for
exhibitors at our market -
nearly 90 this Christmas! I
really feel that this year is
already demonstrating the
importance of collaboration
and community for all
Edinburgh creatives.”
Summerhall CEO, Sam
Gough, said: “What I love
about the Summerhall
Christmas Market is just how
authentic it is – local makers,
boutique sellers and
high-quality produce. It
really is the highlight of the
month and will just be so
much fun.”

1ST


In 1695, the Bank of Scotland was
founded by an Act of the Scottish
Parliament. And in 1828, Rumford
Medal-winning Balfour Stewart was
born at 1 London Row in Leith, the
son of William Stewart a tea-
merchant, and his wife, Jane
Clouston. Also in 1897, Naomi
Mitchison (née Haldane), author,
poet, and politician, was born in
Edinburgh; Mitchison was a
campaigner for women’s issues and a
lifelong Socialist.

5TH


In 1854, Susan Edmonstone Ferrier,
Scottish novelist (Scotland’s “Jane
Austen”), died in Edinburgh and is
buried in St Cuthbert’s Churchyard.
And in 1879, Edinburgh-born
mathematician and physicist James
Clerk Maxwell, died; his most notable
achievement was to formulate the
classical theory of electromagnetic
radiation, bringing together for the
first time electricity, magnetism, and
light as different manifestations of
the same phenomenon. Also in 1940,

six 250 pound bombs fell around
Corstorphine Hill.

12TH
In 1869, Edinburgh University
admitted female medical students for
the first time; however they were not
able to graduate, as women were not
allowed to practice on medical
wards; as an aside a woman,
masquerading as Dr James Barry,
actually took a medical degree at
Edinburgh University in 1812 and
became an army surgeon.

30TH


In 1996, fifteen days after the
return of the Stone of Destiny,
thousands of people lined the Royal
Mile in Edinburgh to watch troops
escort it from Holyrood Palace up to
Edinburgh Castle. And in 1998,
Queen Elizabeth II opened the
modern extension to what is now
the National Museum of Scotland.

The complete list of all events in
November can be viewed on:
theedinburghreporter.co.uk

Dr James Barry, AKA
Margaret Anne Bulkley

Andrew Mackenzie, Quarry 4, Blue,
2022, oil on panel. ©the artist
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