IN TIME AND SILENTLY
PHILIP BRAHAM
‘ E nergy, At play But for In time
balance, outbreak for their own sake now we foot it lightly and silently.’
SEAMUS HEANEY
THE
SCOTTISH
GALLERY
CONTEMPORARY ART SINCE 1842
IN TIME AND SILENTLY
PHILIP BRAHAM 6th JANUARY — 3rd FEBRUARY 2018
16 DUNDAS STREET EDINBURGH EH3 6HZ +44 (0) 131 558 1200 mail@scottish-gallery.co.uk scottish-gallery.co.uk
IN TIME AND SILENTLY
T
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welve days before his death, Seamus Heaney wrote the the care and attention I give to the process of representation poem In Time for his granddaughter Síofra. It speaks is like an act of love or devotion, both to the natural scene of her life force as a palpable energy that will outlive his. witnessed in time, and to the realisation of the painting over From her toddler wobbles to the surefooted steps of woman- time. So, far from being melancholic, these are affirmative hood he presents her as like an oratorio: energy, balance, out- paintings that occupy the spaces exposed by absence. Their break. It reprises themes of family as a lineage of Being, and transcendental qualities are otherworldly only to the extent of comportment that both inherits values passed down and of creating a painting that goes beyond its material properyet whose individuality and energy bids Heaney himself to ties to open onto a vista that is complete in itself: a world beside our world. The phenomenologist keep in step. Life is portrayed as a dance that “for now we foot lightly”, but the The subjects are acutely Merleau-Ponty puts it this way: “The painter’s world is the visible world, proximity of death foreshadows his and observed moments in nothing but the visible: a world almost our time silently. mad, because it is complete though only The themes that preoccupied nature that have arrested Heaney are similar to those that have me from everyday life and partial. Painting awakens and carries to its highest pitch a delirium which is concerned me in the last ten years or so caused me to reflect on since the death of my father. My painthe myriad small wonders vision itself, for to see is to have at a distance; painting extends this strange tings might be described as eschatolothat spontaneously arise possession to all aspects of Being, which gical in that they concern themselves somehow become visible in order to enter with last things: they are narratives at and collapse around us into the work of art.” the horizons of death, but without the continuously. mystical preoccupations that underpin And how many of us have not yet eschatology as metaphysics. Instead, they are very much ‘of been undone by death? It is a universal aspect of Being that this world’. The subjects are acutely observed moments in na- each of us comes to know in time, but the temporality of ture that have arrested me from everyday life and caused me our existence gives life an ecstatic significance that is pure to reflect on the myriad of small wonders that spontaneously joy and lightness of being, and these are the moments I seek arise and collapse around us continuously: light on blades of to translate into paint. The landscapes I depict are familiar grass or leaves, blown clouds and shifting shadows, divots of ones, often of the fields, woods, sea and shore near to my home ploughed earth or breaking waves and surf. That life goes on at Silverknowes in northwest Edinburgh, or the landscapes unfettered by death or loss is a triumph to be celebrated, and of Fife and Perthshire as I travel to my teaching job at the
college of art in Dundee, or perhaps of the Cairngorms or took her life by walking into the sea was absent from the other ranges explored while on holiday. They invoke personal photograph. The absence of the figure comes to stand for nonexistence itself, but the presence of the painting as a whole memories or recall earlier themes in my work. One example is the painting titled Still Water (2017) and complete vision supersedes that void as an affirmation which recollects High Summer (Remembering Ophelia) made of the unchangeable and seemingly infinite world reprein 2013. It depicts the same stretch of the Water of Leith, but sented as sea, sky, wind and light. this time in autumn. Islands of foam created by decaying or- Several paintings take notions of ‘the void’ as their ganic matter float in constellations across the dark surface, subject: Into the Void and Pilgrims of the Void, but also Nightfall their flashes of light echoing those in the foliage above, on Mt. Hermon, Falling Angel and Sentinel all seem similarly while the golden iridescence of the sunlit leaves is reflected emergent and insubstantial. Weather conditions obscure clear in the foreground. The Ophelia series paid homage to John vision in these works, giving the image the quality of an evapoEverett Millais for his attention to the details of lived expe- rating dream, more felt than seen. Mount Hermon borders rience as much as to the narrative of the Syria and Lebanon to one side, and the Israeli departing Ophelia. But the figure of Ophelia My paintings may occupied Golan Heights to the other. Legend was not present in either of the two pain- be described as tells that Mt. Hermon was the gate of the tings: she is evoked in the title of the fallen angels and in this region of religious eschatological in first, but exists only in my mind as assodivision missiles now rain from either side that they concern ciated to the second. But is that not how the like falling angels of destruction. The void departed are experienced in time, only as themselves with is an abyss of uncertainty, living with an ima fugitive memory? last things. manent threat of death. We might say that we all live close to this abyss, but those in Tidal Swell, Firth of Forth operates in a similar way. Firstly, the dark sky and stormy sea recalls war-torn regions feel it viscerally, every moment of every day. the Romantic masterpiece Monk by the Sea (1810) by Caspar In Scotland we might be surprised to experience the sonic David Friedrich. But it also refers to a photograph titled boom of a fighter-jet on military exercise as we enjoy the gentle Tidal Swell, Monifieth, one of a series I produced in 2009 col- pleasure of walking in the hills and valleys of the Highlands, lectively titled Suicide Notes that recorded sites of suicide but that same sound will cause mortal terror in other regions incidents across Scotland that year. The figure of the monk where the jets are deployed for real. 21st Century Sublime, contemplating the vastness of nature in the Friedrich pain- Storm Clouds Over Stanley and Weathering Skies, Stanley reflect ting is absent here, just as the figure of the woman who on this predatory presence in our skies.
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Is there not something chillingly beautiful about the grace spectre of Ben Macdui reports that several witnesses went and power of these machines of destruction? We live under mad with fear and threw themselves from the mountain to their protective shadow, getting-on with our peaceful lives as escape the ghost of their own presence. Viewers who stand if it were not there. Living-on is the recurring theme under- before Spectral Vision on High Ground are invited to see themselves as the shadow encircled in the painting. pinning all of these paintings. Paintings, if cared for, will last for hundreds Time is considered through the Paintings are of years, so many generations may potentially cyclical rotations of the seasons in works respositories of stand before the image and see the shadow of like Vernal Equinox, Moonrise and Morning meanings that we their own death in it. of the Autumn Equinox in which a golden come to impose Or will they? For all that I have written in tree sheds its leaves to form a perfect this text, outlining the intentions I had in circle at its base. The view across the upon them and they creating these paintings, the fact is that a fields towards Cramond in the former escape reification painting is autonomous and enters the world is depicted again in three paintings of at every turn. unadorned, its meaning pliable and open to the rapeseed crop observed first in March They do not speak interpretation. For paintings are presented as the green shoots appear, then in May to us for language as complete worlds in our own time that is an as vibrant yellow bloom, and finally after unfolding present, not one rooted to a past. the harvest in August when the stalks is too concrete. We see the work within the frame of our own have turned tawny-gold. In the last of these, the upper half of the painting is picturesque and idyllic, here and now, and make of it what we will. In that sense but the foreground shows the writhing tangle of jagged cropped paintings are repositories for meanings that we come to stalks up-close. Disquiet persists in these innocent paintings impose upon them and they escape reification at every turn. They do not speak to us, for language is too concrete. Rather, from nature too. Spectral Vision on High Ground is a painting of the phe- they captivate us and hold us under their spell, and they quietly nomenon known as a Brocken Spectre that occurs when the shape us to begin to see the world through the regime of the sun is positioned behind the observer and casts her shadow painting. They bring us to speech through their silence. onto water vapour to form a complete circular rainbow around it. The curious thing is that the observer will only see her own shadow in the centre, even if she is not alone at the scene. PHILIP BRAHAM, If she runs, the shadow will run with her. The legend of the November 2017 N° 11 | 21st Century Sublime | 2016 | oil on canvas | 92 × 122 cm
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N° 1
STILL WATER
2017 | OIL ON CANVAS | 92 × 122 CM
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N° 2
STILL WATER AT DUSK
2017 | OIL ON CANSON FIGUERAS PAPER | 14.6 × 21 CM
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N° 3
TIDAL DRAWING SILVERKNOWES
2017 | OIL ON CANSON FIGUERAS PAPER | 26 × 34 CM
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N° 4
TIDELINES
2015 | OIL ON LINEN | 25 × 35 CM
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N° 5
TIDAL SWELL, FIRTH OF FORTH
2017 | OIL ON LINEN | 100 × 81 CM
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N° 6
INTO THE VOID
2016 | OIL ON CANVAS | 92 × 122 CM
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N° 7
PILGRIMS OF THE VOID
2016 | OIL ON CANVAS | 61 × 92 CM
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N° 8
NIGHTFALL ON MT. HERMON
2016 | OIL ON CANVAS | 46 × 61 CM
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N° 9
FALLING ANGEL
2016 | OIL ON LINEN | 25 × 35 CM
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N° 10
CLIMBER (STUDY)
2017 | OIL ON BOARD | 10 × 12 CM
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N° 11
21ST CENTURY SUBLIME
2016 | OIL ON CANVAS | 92 × 122 CM
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N° 12
STORM CLOUDS OVER STANLEY
2016 | OIL ON CANVAS | 61 × 92 CM
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N° 13
WEATHERING SKIES, STANLEY
2017 | OIL ON CANVAS | 92 × 122 CM
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N° 14
RAPEFIELD IN MARCH
2017 | OIL ON LINEN | 81 × 106 CM
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N° 15
RAPEFIELD IN MAY
2017 | OIL ON LINEN | 81 × 106 CM
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N° 16
RAPEFIELD IN AUGUST
2017 | OIL ON LINEN | 89 × 116 CM
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N° 17
MORNING OF THE AUTUMN EQUINOX
2016 | OIL ON CANVAS | 61 × 92 CM
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N° 18
RESTING PLACE
2017 | OIL ON CANSON FIGUERAS PAPER | 15 × 20 CM
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N° 19
OVERHANGING BRANCHES
2016 | OIL ON CANVAS | 25 × 31 CM
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N° 20
SUNLIT LEAVES, RIVER BRAAN
2017 | OIL ON FABRIANO PITTURA PAPER | 23 × 23 CM
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N° 21
LEAVES IN A POOL
2016 | OIL ON LINEN | 25 × 35 CM
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N° 22
SENTINEL
2016 | OIL ON CANVAS | 46 × 61 CM
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N° 23
WINTERWOOD
2014 | OIL ON BOARD | 15 × 20 CM
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N° 24
TREE IN SNOW
2014 | OIL ON BOARD | 20 × 15 CM
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N° 25
CORSTORPHINE HILL, WINTER
2017 | OIL ON CANSON FIGUERAS PAPER | 26 × 34 CM
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N° 26
SIGHTHILL CEMETERY (AFTER MUIRHEAD BONE)
2017 | OIL ON FABRIANO PITTURA PAPER | 30 × 40 CM
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N° 27
REMEMBERING UMBRIA
2017 | OIL ON CANSON FIGUERAS PAPER | 14.6 × 21 CM
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N° 28
THE ROAD TO AUGUSTOWSKA
2017 | OIL ON FABRIANO PITTURA PAPER | 14.6 × 21 CM
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N° 29
CROSSING THE FIELDS AT NIGHT
2017 | OIL ON CANSON FIGUERAS PAPER | 14.6 × 21 CM
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N° 30
MOONRISE, VERNAL EQUINOX
2016 | ALKYD ON FABRIANO ARTISTICO PAPER | 33 × 51 CM
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N° 31
STRAWBERRY FIELDS, ALYTH
2017 | OIL ON CANSON FIGUERAS PAPER | 26 × 34 CM
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N° 32
LAST LIGHT
2016 | OIL ON CANVAS | 46 × 61 CM
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N° 33
NIGHTFALL OVER THE CARSE OF GOWRIE
2017 | OIL ON FABRIANO PITTURA PAPER | 23 × 33 CM
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N° 34
THE NORTH SEA
2016 | OIL ON CANVAS | 70 × 60 CM
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N° 35
NOCTURNE IN GOLD
2015 | OIL ON CANVAS | 92 × 122 CM
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N° 36
SPECTRAL VISION ON HIGH GROUND
2016 | OIL ON CANVAS | 100 × 140 CM
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PHILIP BRAHAM Philip Braham graduated from Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art in 1980, before completing a Postgraduate at the Royal Academy of Fine Art in Holland the following year. He then undertook a further year of research as visiting artist at the University of California at Los Angeles. Braham first came to prominence in the 1980’s with the rise of figurative painting in Scotland that culminated in The Vigorous Imagination exhibition at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art in 1987. His first solo exhibition at The Scottish Gallery was in 1985, then subsequently in 1988, 2005 and 2014. Galleries in London, Berlin, Copenhagen, and Oslo have represented his work, and major public and private collections hold examples of his paintings and photographs. In 2010 he presented a solo exhibition at the Royal Scottish Academy during the Edinburgh Festival. Awards include the prestigious RSA Guthrie Award for Painting in 1994 and the RSA Morton Award for Lens Based Work, 2009. Braham works in both painting and photography, and his research investigates the differences and overlaps between these two disciplines, acknowledging that both are supremely capable of authentic representations of Being. His practice is informed by his interest in continental aesthetics. Philip Braham is Programme Director for Art and Philosophy at the University of Dundee.
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Image: Philip in his Edinburgh studio, November 2017
1959
Born in Glasgow
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS
1976–80 Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art, Dundee. DA (Painting)
2017
Through the Woods, Jagged Art, London
1980–81 Royal Academy of Fine Art, The Hague, Holland
2017
he Vigorous Imagination Revisited, Roger Billcliffe Gallery, T Glasgow
2017
The Vigorous Imagination: Then and Now, Fine Art Society, Edinburgh
2017
Critic’s Choice, Bohun Gallery, Henley upon Thames, London
2016
Flora Depicta, The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
2016
Reunion, Union Gallery, Edinburgh
The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
2015
September Song, Roger Billcliffe Gallery, Glasgow
2016
Roger Billcliffe Gallery, Glasgow
2014
Royal Scottish Academy 188th Exhibition, Edinburgh
2014
The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
2013
Tender and Savage, Robert Burns Birthplace Museum, Alloway
2011
Raab Gallery, Berlin
2011
DIY: Photographers & Books, Cleveland Art Museum, Ohio
2011
Union Gallery, Edinburgh
2011
Surrealism versus the Sublime, Raab Gallery, Berlin
2010
Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh
2006
Osborne Samuel, London
2011 7 European Artists in Yemen, Royal Geographical Society, London
2005
The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
2003
BCA Gallery, London
2000
Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh
2010 8 European Artists in Yemen, Bab-al Yemen Gallery, Sana’a, Yemen
2000
BCA Gallery, London
2009 Royal Scottish Academy 183rd Exhibition:
1999
Compass Gallery, Glasgow
1998
Galleri Christian Dam, Oslo
1997
BCA Gallery, London
2009 Inspired, Homecoming Scotland exhibition; Mitchell Library, Glasgow
1995
Raab Boukamel Gallery, London
2008
Royal Scottish Academy 182nd Exhibition
1994
Galleri Christian Dam, Copenhagen
2008
Scottish Landscape, The Park Gallery, Falkirk
1994
Raab Boukamel Gallery, London
2007
Royal Scottish Academy 181st Exhibition
1993
Compass Gallery, Glasgow
2005
The Call of the Sea, Open Eye Gallery, Edinburgh
1992
Raab Gallery, London
2003 40th Anniversary Exhibition, Demarco European Art Foundation
1989
Raab Gallery, London
2002 Adapt, Kelvingrove Art Gallery & Museum, Glasgow
1988
The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
1987
The Glasgow Arts Centre
2001 New European Artists, exhibition and book launch, Sotheby’s, Amsterdam
1985
The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
1999
Mountain, Wolverhampton Art Gallery and Museum
1984
Main Fine Art, Glasgow
1998
Art and Nature, The Botanic Gardens, Cagliari, Sardinia
1981–82 University of California at Los Angeles, Visiting Artist 2000
0.5 FTE Lecturer in Fine Art, DJCAD, University of Dundee
2013 Programme Director for Art & Philosophy; DJCAD, University of Dundee SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2017
2011
7 European Artists in Yemen, Institut du Monde Arabe, Paris
2010
Public Image, Cooper Gallery, University of Dundee
RSA Morton Award winner
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1998
Scotland The Brave, Forbes Galleries, New York
2009
Royal Scottish Academy Morton Award for lens-based work
2003
Friends of the Royal Scottish Academy Research Bursary
1996
1994
Guthrie Award, Royal Scottish Academy
1989
Scottish Arts Council Award
1985
Educational Institute of Scotland Award
1981
Greenshields Award
1980
British Council Scholarship
Endangered Spaces, Christies, London
1996 Liebe und Poesie, Galerie Tobias Hirschmann, Frankfurt, Germany 1996
Die Kraft Der Bilder, Martin-Gropius Bau, Berlin, Germany
1995 Royal Scottish Academy 169th exhibition: 1st Prize RSA Guthrie Award 1994 Visions of Albion III, Collyer-Bristow, London
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AWARDS
1997 International Kunst, Galleri Christian Dam, Copenhagen, Denmark
1994
The Glory of the Garden, Art Space, London
1993
Visions of Albion II, Collyer Bristow, London
PUBLIC COLLECTIONS Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museum
1992 150th anniversary exhibition, The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
BBC London
1992 Visions of Albion – Aspects of British Landscape, Collyer-Bristow, London
Chichester University Collections The City Art Centre, Edinburgh
1991 20th Century Scottish Painting, Royal West of England Academy, Bristol
Contemporary Art Society, London
1991 New Scottish Painting, Galerie Bureaux et Magazins, Ostend, Belgium
The Fleming Collection, London
1990 Philip Braham, Martin Kane, Barbara Rae – Midlands Contemporary Art
Life Association of Scotland
1989
Il Giocco Dell’Oca, Cagliari, Sardinia
1989
CITAC, Sala Parpallo/Deputation Ce Valencia, Spain
1987
20th Century Scottish Masters, The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
1987 The Vigorous Imagination, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art
Educational Institute of Scotland University of Dundee Collections Lillie Art Gallery, Glasgow McManus Art Gallery, Dundee Pallant House Gallery, Chichester Perth Museum and Art Gallery The Richard Demarco Archive, Edinburgh
1986
Scottish Art Today, Edinburgh International Festival
Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh
1986
The Human Touch, Fischer Fine Art, London
Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh
1895
Portraits on Paper, Scottish Arts Council touring exhibition
Scottish Parliament, Edinburgh
1985
Networking, O’Kane Gallery, Houston, Texas
Standard Life, Edinburgh
1985
The Smith Biennial, Stirling
Stirling University Collections Sunderland Art Gallery
Published by The Scottish Gallery to coincide with the exhibition:
IN TIME, AND SILENTLY
PHILIP BRAHAM 6th January — 3rd February 2018
ISBN: 978-1-910267-71-4 Designer: Sigrid Schmeisser Printer: Barr Printers Photography: Philip Braham Cover and Back cover artwork: N° 16, Rapefield in August (Detail), 2017, oil on linen, 89 × 116 cm
THE
SCOTTISH
GALLERY
CONTEMPORARY ART SINCE 1842 16 DUNDAS STREET • EDINBURGH EH3 6HZ +44 (0) 131 558 1200 • mail@scottish-gallery.co.uk • scottish-gallery.co.uk
THE
SCOTTISH
GALLERY
CONTEMPORARY ART SINCE 1842