Artist Janette Kerr currently has an online exhibition called State of the Sea. It’s well worth a visit and will encourage much contemplation.
Her work is powerful and very evocative of wild water, raucous waves, wind-slapping cagoule and the emotions of being at the edge, the Northern edge. She writes that ‘My paintings represent immediate responses to sound and silences within the landscape around me; they are about movement and the rhythms of sea and wind, swelling and breaking waves, the merging of spray with air, advancing rain and mist, glancing sunlight – elements that seem to be about something intangible.’.
This is a poem by Don Paterson that was commissioned in 2005 to mark the publication of Scotland’s Cultural Commission.
We, the Scottish people, undertake To find within our culture a true measure Of the mind’s vitality and spirit’s health; To see that what is best in us is treasured, And what is treasured, held as common wealth; To guarantee all Scots folk, of whatever Age or origin, estate or creed, The means and the occasion to discover Their unique gift, and let it flower and seed; To act as democratic overseer Of our whole culture: wise conservator Of its tradition, its future’s engineer, The only engine of its living hour; To take just pride in all our diverse tongues, Folks and customs – and also what is yet Most distinct in us: our infinite songs, Our profligate invention and thrawn debate; To honour our best artists, and respect Not just the plain cost of their undertaking But the worth of what they make, and every act Of service and midwifery to that making; And to discover, through our artistry And fine appreciation of our art, What we are not – so know ourselves to be The world, both in microcosm and part, And recognise in this our charge of care To friend and stranger, bird and beast and tree, To the planetary and local space we share. We will do this wakefully, and imaginatively.
What, if anything, is distinctively Scottish about art from Scotland?
Is there a ‘unique‘ gift or are we ‘the world, both in microcosm and in part‘.
The Scottish Maritime museum is located in Irvine, Ayrshire. It holds a varied collection of paintings of Scotland’s seas though few are on permanent display.
‘Based in the West of Scotland, with sites in Irvine and Dumbarton, the Scottish Maritime Museum holds an important nationally recognised collection, encompassing a variety of historic vessels, artefacts, fascinating personal items and the largest collection of shipbuilding tools and machinery in the country. The buildings and sites which the Scottish Maritime Museum occupies are themselves part of the heritage collection.
The Scottish Maritime Museum in Irvine is housed within the vast, glass-roofed Victorian Linthouse. This A listed ‘cathedral of engineering’ was formerly the Engine Shop of Alexander Stephen and Sons shipyard in Govan before being salvaged and relocated to Irvine in 1991.
The Scottish Maritime Museum in Dumbarton is located on the site of the former, influential and innovative William Denny Shipyard and features the world’s first commercial ship testing facility, the Denny Ship Model Experiment Tank.’