Joyce W. Cairns

Joyce W. Cairns is a Scottish painter and printmaker based in Aberdeen.

Joyce W. Cairns
Bornb. 1947
NationalityScottish
Known forPainting
ElectedMember of Royal Scottish Academy
Websitewww.joycecairns.co.uk
Footdee Gospel Hall Studio Garden

Biography

Born in Edinburgh in 1947, Cairns was brought up in North East Scotland, where her father was a school master. In 1966, she went to Gray's School of Art in Aberdeen where she studied until 1970. She then took a Master of Art at the Royal College of Art in London from 1971 to 1974. This was followed by a fellowship at Gloucestershire College of Art and Design in Cheltenham. She went on to undertake a further period of study at Goldsmith’s College before returning to Aberdeen in 1976 to take up a teaching post at Gray’s School of Art. On returning to Aberdeen, she moved into the small fishing village of Footdee at the mouth of the harbour in Aberdeen. With small houses facing on to a square, the village is flanked on one side by the industrial harbour of Aberdeen, and the large boats that pass by the house often appear in her paintings. In 1985, she was elected to the Royal Scottish Academy and from 1985 to 1988 she served as the first female president of the Aberdeen Artist’s Society. Cairns took early retirement from teaching in 2004 to focus completely on painting. She now lives in Broughty Ferry, a suburb of Dundee. In 2018 she was elected as the first woman President of the Royal Scottish Academy of Art and Architecture (RSA).

Work

Cairns is a ‘figurative painter of great expressive power’.[1] Her paintings express autobiographical and psychological themes. In the 1970s, mythology was a great influence in her work,[1] but it has been the themes of family, war, and memory that have dominated since. In 2006, Aberdeen Art Gallery hosted a major exhibition entitled War Tourist,[2] an exhibition that recounted the horrors of war in personal terms through her own family history and as a passive observer or war tourist. Cairns visited Tunisia, where her father saw active service, and later Bosnia and the concentration camps of Eastern Europe. The outcome of these travels and years of research were exhibited in 26 large paintings in Aberdeen Art Gallery. Cairns' painting style is rooted in Expressionism [3] and uses iconography to express a narrative. Often working on a large scale, the Cairns' preferred medium is oil on board [4] and the artist uses a grid to plan out elements in a composition.

Cairns has work in public collections including, Aberdeen University, Robert Gordon University, Strathclyde University, Grampian Hospitals Trust, Perth and Kinross Council and Angus Council. She exhibits work in the Compass Gallery, Tatha Gallery in Newport-on-Tay and Kilmorack Gallery.[5]

Her work has been written about in many publications including War Tourist [6] and an interview with Janet Mackenzie in Studio International Contemporary Arts Magazine http://www.studiointernational.com/index.php/joyce-cairns-interview

gollark: It would simply record and encode video and stream it to osmarks.net™ server octahedra™ over WiFi.
gollark: Yes. However, my particular spare phone runs postmarketOS. Or could anyway. Additionally, there exist apps to use them as IP cameras.
gollark: If you were thingying it to JPEG.
gollark: It might be that the JPEG encoder has to work harder.
gollark: They have okay cameras, low power demands, and usable networking capability.

References

  1. Contemporary Painting in Scotland, Bill Hare (Reading: Craftsman House, 1992), p. 38
  2. Arthur Watson, ed., Joyce Cairns War Tourist: An Illustrated Anthology (Aberdeen Art Gallery, 2006).
  3. Arthur Watson, ed., Joyce Cairns War Tourist: An Illustrated Anthology (Aberdeen Art Gallery, 2006), p. 10.
  4. Arthur Watson, ed., Joyce Cairns War Tourist: An Illustrated Anthology (Aberdeen Art Gallery, 2006), p. 14.
  5. http://www.kilmorackgallery.co.uk/artists/72-joyce-w-cairns/overview/
  6. Arthur Watson, ed., Joyce Cairns War Tourist: An Illustrated Anthology (Aberdeen Art Gallery, 2006)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.