December 2024
The FEUVA Christmas Party
SCOTTISH ARTS CLUB
24 Rutland Square,
Edinburgh EH1 2BW
December 10th 7pm – 11pm
You Can Expect . . .
The notorious Art Quiz
Raffle – Live music – drinks & snacks
Entrance: ÂŁ25 From this link
If you want to advertise this event at your studio, download the poster here
The David Talbot Rice Memorial Lecture 2024
“Conversations with Joan” – Kate Downie
Date: November 6th 2024
Time: 6.30pm – 8pm
Place: Edinburgh College of Art – West Court
The FEUVA annual David Rice Memorial Lecture is being given by artist Kate Downie RSA with a focus on her current exhibition at the Glasgow Womenâs Library âConversation with Joanâ.
Drawn to the possibilities left open by Joan Eardleyâs last, incomplete, painting Two Children (1962), artist Kate Downie is debuting her recreated and completed version of Eardleyâs iconic painting alongside other new works that explore childhood, sibling relationships, care and creativity. Downie will discuss her experience of this process in the Memorial Lecture.
Kate Downie RSA (born 1958)
Born in America of British parentage, Kate returned to live in the North East of Scotland and studied at Grayâs School of Art in Aberdeen. Described as âone of the most subtle and persuasive colourists of her generationâ and as a âsupreme draughtswomanâ she has enjoyed a long career of travel and foreign residences. She served as President of the Society of Scottish Artist from 2004 to 2006 and was elected a member of the Royal Scottish Academy in 2008. Her work appears in many public and corporate collections including the BBC, Adam & Co, Glasgow Gallery of Modern Art, Aberdeen Art Gallery, City of Edinburgh Council, Kelvingrove Art Gallery, Glasgow, New Hall College Art Collection in Cambridge and HM The Queen.
In 2021 Kate Downie embarked on a project to âfinishâ Joan Eardleyâs Two Children (1962â63), a painting left unfinished on Eardleyâs easel in her Townhead studio following her untimely death from breast cancer at the age of 42 in 1963.
Throughout the process, Downie felt like she was engaging âin conversationâ with Eardley, building a strong emotional connection as she tried to figure out how the painting would have been finished. Collaborating with a dead artist is not easy, but âTwo Childrenâ in its unfinished state was a blueprint of intention and a masterplan of painterly innovation in 1962.
FEUVA PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS
The Film Premiere of:
BEING: Kenneth Dingwall in reminiscence with Duncan Macmillan in his studio.
Venue: Adam House Theatre, Adam House, Chambers Street, Edinburgh
Date: Wednesday March 20th 2024 at 3.30pm
Tickets: ÂŁ6.00
In this film, distinguished artist Kenneth Dingwall, one of the pioneers of abstract painting in Scotland, discusses his life and artistic development with art critic Duncan Macmillan.
Trained at Edinburgh College of Art under the largely-figurative painter Sir William Gillies, and at later Athens School of Fine Art. Dingwall saw little of interesting or accessible abstract art in Scotland; instead, he sought inspiration in the abstract mark-making he found among the artefacts at the National Museum of Antiquities.
Dingwall went on to enjoy an illustrious career as an artist and educator in the UK and the USA. His work is represented in national and international public collections.