GEOFF UGLOW THE PLOUGHMAN
GEOFF UGLOW THE PLOUGHMAN 6–29 January 2022
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Foreword A Rose-bud By My Early Walk, 1787
The Scottish Gallery welcomes back Geoff Uglow
by Robert Burns
for his fourth one-person exhibition with us over the last ten years. He graduated from Glasgow
A Rose-bud by my early walk,
School of Art in 2000 and still credits his time at
Adown a corn-enclosed bawk,
College as a grounding in painting – the pursuit
Sae gently bent its thorny stalk,
of a vocation in something that matters. Uglow
All on a dewy morning.
is a painter for the ages, uncompromising and
Ere twice the shades o’ dawn are fled,
original, his work a love poem to the natural
In a’ its crimson glory spread,
world; only by looking, seeing and responding
And drooping rich the dewy head,
with our senses and emotions may we accord the
It scents the early morning.
respect nature needs from its dominant species. He has responded to a series of questions in this publication, giving insights into his formation as an artist, reflection which brought The Ploughman forward as a title for the exhibition, and giving a fascinating explanation of what, where and even how he paints. Many will remember his first exhibition at The Gallery: Letters from Barra, a body of work made on paper over a winter on the island and, in The Ploughman, he has included an exquisite group of small watercolours which capture the romance and awe of the open ocean. His oil painting has the physical presence of sculpture, but his subject is often ephemeral: the movement of a wave, the bloom of the growing rose, the dusty heat of an Italian roadway. While the work will always stand for itself, his poetic commentary gives us a unique way into his processes: intellectual rigour and instinct; studio and exterior; influence and inspiration; scale and medium; familiarity and the urge for new. Guy Peploe
Geoff Uglow, Cornwall, 2021 3
The Ploughman I Geoff Uglow The Ploughman. How did you come to this title for
It is man’s influence on the land. It represents the
this new body of work?
beginning and the end of a cycle of cultivation. The harvest is done, and the new seed is yet to be planted.
A few years ago, I was painting on the island of
As a boy, I would often plough on the family
Barra and I had taken only one book to read over
farm and I would keenly observe the furrow cut and
the duration of my stay. It was a book about the life
turned, mesmerised by the light reflecting off the
of Robert Burns. It spoke about his early years on
damp soil. I would witness this motion poetically
his father’s farm from where he could see the sea.
reflected in the sea too when a great swell of the
He would thresh grain for the day’s needs, tend the
water is torn by the break or divided by the rip
horses, milk the cows, and plough, which he was
current, or even when the still surface is scored by
good at. Life was built upon principle, and the days’
the paddle of an oar. When I make a painting this
routine of hard work. Things very familiar to me in
process of matter being moved appears again.
my own upbringing.
My hand or brush manipulates the mass of paint,
I was raised on a farm in North Cornwall with
driving, turning, arranging, influencing it. I feel an
generations of farmers before me on my father’s
affinity with Robert Burns since he himself was a
side. Farming heritage, convention and the old ways
farmer’s son and a ploughman. He drew experience
embodied values held with a deep respect.
from the land he lived in, but also channelled those
I remember the thresher and the horse ploughs in
early experiences and strong emotional highs and
the rookery and my father riding horses bareback
lows into his poetry.
across the fields. I was educated in the ways of, the rhythm of, farming life as I grew up, witnessing the
How do you believe you came to be a painter?
changing of the seasons and how all my country life was linked inextricably to it. My painting draws a
I was a restless child, too much energy, and nowhere
harvest from the land and sea, the Atlantic ever-
to place it until I found painting.
changing and present. In the winter I am drawn to the sea which is only a very short distance from
I’m not sentimental about my past. I’m more interested in the works to be made and the future.
my studio; all the warm colour drains from the
My family were quite Victorian in many ways.
landscape and everything becomes black and white
I wanted to be liberated… to be free from any kind
and grey. In the spring and summer, the subject of
of yoke. When I went to Glasgow, to art school,
the garden takes over. Swollen growth buds appear
I felt that yoke lifted. I grew up with security, and all
on the trees, the melody of blossom appears and
the wholesome things family life can bring. When
the roses bloom and so this governs my time.
I left home, I was searching for anything but that.
The plough is the implement used in farming that draws over the soil and turns it. It cuts furrows in the earth, in preparation for the planting of seeds. 4
I wanted adventure and freedom. It is important that my themes and subjects are simple and accessible; they usually suggest
something observed in nature. They are grand
are found everywhere in the natural world; energy
and romantic themes. For me they are the perfect
travelling through matter, be that the turning of
subjects on which to hang these universal themes
the soil by the plough, blooms forming as the rose
that express the human condition – especially love.
opens to the sunlight, the orbicular halo of light
The act of painting employs many skills. It is
encircling a full moon, the branching tributaries of
cerebral, it uses emotions and technical expertise
a tree, the amplitude and frequency of a wave – all
but for me, it must also be physical. Especially
dynamic systems within which we find both order
where the larger paintings are concerned, physical
and chaos.
exertion is involved. The studio is a place of hard
In the spring and summer I’m drawn to my rose
work – stretch canvases all day and your fingers
garden and the garden in general, really. Beyond the
can bleed. Paintings are physical objects that must
rose garden is the fruit orchard and then the land
be moved – out into the landscape, or around the
falls away into a valley where a river runs, and it is
studio. They will be hung upon a wall – they must be
all good material for painting. On the other side of
handled. Works on board can become very heavy
the valley are the fields I sometimes used to plough.
indeed. I mix paint in buckets – not in small amounts.
But because of the danger in the steepness of
Paintings are made by laying the canvas down flat,
them, and for fear of a tractor rolling over, my father
usually on the floor. They cannot be painted upright
changed its use and we – my parents, my siblings
because of the sheer amount of wet paint used.
and I – planted a wood there instead. The wood is
It would simply fall off. Much crouching and bending
the view I have from my studio windows and the
and stretching is involved. The pressure and tempo
colour and texture of it changes magically over the
of my own hand must be upon it, and detectable
course of the year. The colour from afar represents
to the viewer. The energy of my own body creates
the season. Blackthorn blossom, the fern going over
it in a moment in time that can never be repeated.
to a rust colour, larch in vivid green bud.
In a western world where everything is designed
All the natural scenery around my studio
to make life easier, I respect and relate more to the
holds important features for painting, but the rose
ploughman of the past who wrestled and grappled
continues to be a key emblem. I paint my roses
with life and the challenges it brought.
every year when they bloom from April through to
What are the most important subjects for
sweet colour hovering splendidly. Less green at
November. Even in December some remain; their painting?
that time of year, more a background of silver and fawn, winter-woodiness, and maybe a vibrant
The tree, the sun, the sea, a rose, light; there seems
little bloom singing operatically within it. The rose
to be little about my work that doesn’t involve the
reconnects me to the growing season, to the time
phenomena of the physical world – my place in it,
when there were more hours of daylight. Dark
how I steward it, how I affect it and how it affects me.
winter weather can be frustrating. Since light is
It’s usually there in one form or another.
such an important factor in my work, a lack of it has
There are recurring themes unifying most of
implications. Perhaps that is why I feel the need to
the subjects I choose to study. These motifs have
travel – like a plant bending towards the strongest
a shared character of never-ending, self-similar
light, I will move to the place where I can absorb
pattern – circularity perhaps. Patterns of energy
the most. 5
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Light is the essence of life itself. Without light there is nothing. Nothing lives, nothing grows. It allows us to see and experience the world that
culture, inspiring personal interpretation. It is a single figure overflowing with historical symbolism. It represents many things including
surrounds us by distinguishing its details. It has a
love, power, royalty, beauty, sensuality, femininity,
profound impact on us as human beings in terms
romance, passion, purity, holiness, wisdom, joy,
of physiology, biology and of course psyche. It is the
sacrifice, gratitude, grace, admiration, courage; even
main source of energy for all living organisms and
death and rebirth as viewed by the Romans. It is a
provides the warmth of our atmosphere and rhythm
figure that has been so overloaded with meanings
in our lives. Light intensity and light duration can
over the centuries that it has no single locked-in
affect what my paintings become. I don’t live in a
meaning at all, and so I feel I can freely claim it for
built-up area – I am very aware of whether the moon
my own purposes. And I do. The figure of the rose
is waxing or waning, am alert to the opening and
will effortlessly assume any combination of colour
closing of the day and I sense what the weather will
I choose to give it, and suits the sweeping lyrical
be like in the morning depending on the sunset.
brush marks that I like.
I choose to focus on subjects that are uplifting
Over time I have become most interested in the
and inspiring – bewildering natural phenomena,
emotion the rose conveys. I have images in my mind
human endeavour that inspires and delights and
always, of paintings I haven’t made yet. If an idea, a
provokes sublime thought and creativity. The world
feeling, or a combination of colours keeps coming
is full of chaos and suffering, but I won’t paint there.
back to my attention, then I will need to paint it out.
I prefer the remedy of beauty in love and nature
And that painting will inform another, and another,
found in the familiar. I always come back to things,
again and again. The more work you make the more
to build meaningful relationships, not only with
painting opportunities present themselves. Ideas for
people but also with nature and with the subjects
rose paintings never stop.
and locations I use for painting. It takes a great deal of time to explore a subject
What stimulates the mind is the act of painting. It’s a way of connecting all my senses. By painting
thoroughly through painting. I welcome new
I can capture things that are elusive and turn them
experiences always, but returning to the same
into something physical. Kiefer said, “Art is longing.
subjects again and again works well in a practical
You never arrive, but you keep going in the hope
sense. I can reconnect quickly with a subject I have
that you will.” Painting is the longing to see the
painted for a long time and that gives rise to a good
beauty and passion and joy of something seen or
flow of work. There is familiarity but the details and
experienced rendered into a physical object that
how I might respond are never the same.
can be kept.
Cézanne said “turn on your heel and you have a lifetime of work”. He also said painting from
Tell us something about your use of impasto
nature is not copying the object; it’s realizing
technique.
one’s sensations… That statement is relevant to all my painting, but perhaps to the rose paintings
The surface of a thick oil painting will flatten out the
especially. They are portraits of love in its many
further back from it you step – your eye loses the
guises, descriptions of love. The rose is an open
ability to read the surface of it and illusion takes over.
symbol, replete with possibility, available to any
The mind will try to make sense of the space that 7
these elements create. But move yourself very close
within it can be immense. And yet my eye can
to the surface and the illusion of space disappears.
interpret the whole surface in an instant. I can
You become aware of the body of the paint, the relief
make sense of the illusion from a single viewpoint.
of the surface. Your eye follows the undulations, and you sense the impression of the artist’s hand upon
I can paint a tiny image with a great deal of distance in it. My imagination is drawn through the
it. I like that. I like to see the evidence of a direct
notional window of the picture plane into the illusion
decision being made in the paint. Like a man’s
of space so effortlessly and pleasingly. But a large
plough decisively marking the earth. Watercolour
painting is quite a different journey. The dynamic is
is so thin and has a completely different personality.
different. The painting dominates you.
In comparison to the sizeable quantities of oil paint I use, watercolour is like breath, like breathing an
A large 210 by 180-centimetre painting, for example, envelopes you when you stand before it.
illusion onto paper. Oil paint is viscous and opaque
It can tower over you. It has an imposing power
and heavy by nature. It can be thick enough to bank
simply because it is a larger object than you.
up. I have thoroughly explored and exploited those
You are facing a giant. It is a sea of paint that
properties of paint to their limit in the past.
stretches wide into your peripheral vision.
I want an oil painting to be a very physical
The eye cannot look at the whole painting at
object by the time I’ve finished working with it.
once but only parts of it at a time. Interestingly,
I cannot afford to be tentative in the creation of it –
it has dimensions you could physically inhabit,
I must prepare very generous volumes of paint with
like a bed.
which to work. Only then can I lose myself in the
A large painting seen from a great distance
sensory experience of pulling my brush through the
becomes a small painting. If you place a large
body of it with uninterrupted flow and confidence.
canvas in the landscape, it becomes a miniature.
Given the background from which I came,
If I stand well back from a large painting, the space
I recognise myself as a physically driven person.
in it changes – it flattens out. Making a painting that
Handling large volumes of paint on large canvases
is bigger than you are is more physically challenging.
requires a physical effort and participation. That
How do you mark one corner of the canvas and
suits my character very well and comes naturally
reach the opposite side cleanly in one motion?
to me.
How to you keep a control over the development of the painting, if you can’t reach one end to the other
Variety of scale is important in a painting exhibition.
without walking several steps? Where you position
Is this something you consider when choosing
your own body will influence the mark you make
your format?
– its direction and weight. If you wish to create an illusion of space that suspends disbelief, then you
Scale of a painting is curious. When painting a
must consider from where and from what angle you
canvas that is larger than you are, you paint with
approach the canvas. You might keep circling it, for
your whole body as opposed to with the wrist or
example, painting the canvas from all angles. You
from the elbow. A 15 by 17-centimetre painting
might even build a frame over it, that will support
can be carried around with you in your bag. It feels
your weight, so that you can apply paint from above.
precious, intimate…but the power it must stir the
Also, a larger canvas might require the use of a
senses can defy its physical size – the illusory space
much larger brush.
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Painting on a large scale allows you to indulge
that the painting is permeated with emotion. It is the
more in the language of paint itself. The image can
description of colour and light in a painting which
become irrelevant. When your face is close
possesses the emotional potential.
enough to the painted surface, it’s like reading a map or floating above a landscape like a bird.
The warmth of the southern climate of Italy brings the tonal value and the saturation of the
You might read a confluence of marks meandering
palette much closer together. The light can bleach
their way towards a still pool. Tributaries of colour
out the contrast. There is harsh contrast at certain
will converge or diverge. A strong natural light
times of day, but the shadows still have a warmth.
might illuminate puffs of pearlescent pigment. Veils
Heat is sovereign in the spring and summer.
of blue iridescence can glow over an area like an
It mercilessly forces itself upon every part of the
apparition or a will-o-the-wisp. Very thin washes of
landscape, it saturates everything, even the colour
pigment and turps can set like the bloom on soft
in the shadows. Shadows hover. Summer heat in
fruit. Thick paint can be turned, folded, piled up,
the United Kingdom rarely burns your feet as you
layered, spread… to render valleys, and elevations.
walk over the earth but come midday in Italy and
Colour can accumulate in low-lying areas, basins,
you cannot touch a rock outside for the heat of it.
canyons. There is folding and faulting in the
That rock, painted, will be hot too which is achieved
structure of the paint, and some textures can be
by mixing warmth of colour into your palette. There
seen to have been compressed by the weight of
is a lot of looking and mixing to understand how to
overlying material. Excavations from the top surface
convey such a thing well. Corot is a perfect example
down to the base stratum can reveal hidden coats layered down long before. Harmony or discord is
of an artist whose work shows this understanding – how painting in different locations changes
perceived depending on which colours meet and
everything about your painting, all the terms of
in what quantities. The eye will recognise pressure
it – light, space, colour, mood, mark – everything.
applied and retracted, changing velocity of stroke
We see the atmosphere change in Corot’s paintings.
and intrusions of a sharp, whipped mark. Some
Look at his French paintings and you will see a
pigment separates from its carrier oil and seems to
silvery quality in them, much closer to the winter
crystallise as it ages.
light of Scotland or Cornwall. The mid-tone of the
What has Italy offered you as an artist?
almost all the time. But Corot’s small Roman studies
painting is knocked down and has a grey cast to it have the palette of a Morandi still life. In this country we do not experience the same
Turner dealt with Italian light wonderfully.
intensity of colour and light that can be found there.
The quality of light in his paintings is most often
Here we have a temperate climate – a northern light.
southern. Even when he made paintings of England,
This brings about the relative colour on the palette.
he kept with him that knowledge of intense,
Italy is so different in climate and light. Travelling
dissolving southern light. The kind of light that
between here and there repeatedly, makes me
dissolves form – it dissolves the edges of things.
conscious of the significant differences between
I see this in his watercolours especially. Whereas
them. Accumulating knowledge of colour and light
Constable didn’t travel abroad. His paintings
in all its variations is a most fundamental element
are quintessentially English, very distinguished
in the practice of painting. This knowledge ensures
observations of the English landscape. The light and 11
palette is northern. Rarely in the British landscape
with trying to figure out these feelings at the same
do we see that intensity of light that Turner often
time as painting. This element, the emotion, is surely
displays. In Britain, the sky is usually the lightest
the buried treasure of any painting. Whether in Italy,
tone. Only on a thundery day is it not. In Italy
or here or wherever, painting a landscape, a flower,
however, it is the light reflecting off the buildings
or a tree – whatever the scene – my emotional
and the rocks, tufo and marble, that make them the
response will affect how the pressure of my hand
brightest features.
moves across the surface of the canvas. When
The amount of light your eye is absorbing is so
beginning the study of a new or unknown landscape,
very different from one country to the next and
I suppress my energy somewhat. My pace and
I love the contrast – observing, documenting, and
handling is slow and considered. I am humble
experiencing the differences is an education, and a
before my subject. I let it dominate me. Then as
very rewarding practice. It means of course that
time passes and I become more familiarised with it,
I have more tools to use by which to express things
and more receptive to its voice, my pace quickens,
that are metaphysical or sensorial. The language of
becomes more assertive, more assured. In the
light and colour that has come directly from nature
end, I have become so familiar with the nuances of
renders thoughts and feelings into a universal one. When Corot was working in Italy, he kept
the scene that I can respond instantaneously to a momentary change of light on a surface, or breeze
his painting within a very accurate range of
through it and can paint an impression of it with
observations. He was not inventing. Both Constable
the grace it deserves. Having assimilated enough
and Corot allow the observation of the landscape
information, I will meet the landscape. In due course
to dominate the painting. Whereas Turner, in a very
my authority within the dialogue levels up with the
sophisticated way, exaggerates his observations
view I am painting. Whatever the landscape says,
of light in the landscape to an extent. This is
I can echo it. I’ve absorbed enough information that
interesting to me. These artists have taught me
I can respond to the landscape. My eye, my hand
much about observation and invention and I avail
and my heart have absorbed enough pictorial and
myself of both approaches, sliding between the two.
emotive information that painting becomes purely
Being British and painting Italy means entering
instinctive. It pours out spontaneously and cleanly.
a very different conversation. It raises so many
One cannot fake or force this, or even experience
more questions and issues and painting challenges,
this the same way twice. This remarkable exchange
all which hone, purify, shape and increase my
only happens when I am in front of the thing I’m
knowledge and ability as a painter.
painting.
Can you comment on the transformation from the
painting in the studio is a different process.
physical to the metaphysical in painting?
A feeling, a palette, a colour will stay in my mind.
The studio paintings are different. Making a
And I will paint a remnant of it. Studio paintings As I make a painting, I’m not only observing a
are the painted remains of one of those profound
landscape and depicting it. A landscape seen at a
experiences of observation. It’s what I retained.
particular moment in your life, in a particular season
I get lost within the painting itself and draw upon the
and time of day, will fill you with an abundance of
remembered experience which was real and very
sensations and sentiments. You become involved
honestly felt, and then paint. What takes over is the
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‘moving through’ of the painting itself. The painted
all these details, these agents, affect light and colour
object itself becomes the experience for me. I am in
and change one’s palette. Deciphering it all, making
conversation with it. I am reacting to my own marks
sense of it as you paint is a complex process that
instead of a landscape. I am reacting to colour I have
requires some dedication and focus.
chosen to mix. I am reacting to how my own brush
Different locations mean whole, new,
pulls through wet paint – what mark that makes.
unexperienced combinations of natural phenomena
I am constructing the space.
to work from. I am awakened and stimulated by
The studio process is more in line with classical painting perhaps, like an altarpiece, like Pontormo or
the challenges different locations of the world present. Stand still on one spot for three weeks
Titian. All those studies that were made before feed
and paint all day, every day: what you are looking at,
into it. Perhaps a studio painting is like a ruin.
(painting), will not be the same from one second to
I am interested in painting ruins in Italy – where
the next; that’s a lot of paintings right there. Not one
man’s endeavours of the past meet the usurping
will be the same. Move to a different location, and
power of nature. It’s pieces of things – pieces of
you begin discovering and wrestling with a whole
colour, parts, portions of sentiment, thoughts
new torrent of information. That simple attitude
overturned – a welter of memories all woven
and approach usually results in the production of
together to create an image of the experience I had.
much fruit. Different locations mark points in time.
Ruins speak about time, and the passing of time is
Painting in certain locations and in different seasons
inextricably linked to painting nature and landscape.
establishes chronology through my work as a whole.
Italy offers me a lot of material in terms of ruins and
I have no doubt that I shall paint roses for the rest of
landscape.
my life, and it is important to me to note or convey
Why are locations important to you?
autumn just after the first frost, or that these others
somehow that these were painted in Cornwall in late are the extensive rugosa hedge I encountered lining Why did Van Gogh move to France? Why did Corot
a long empty road on Orkney before my children
paint in Italy? And Turner, why did he travel? These
were born. My paintings are seldom a naturalistic
men were all interested in the landscape. Different
depiction of a landscape but there are subtle clues
location, different provocation – the results are
to read in them, which reveal the origin. My work
a distinctive palette, and therefore distinctive
does present as a chronicle, often stamped with
paintings. Why restrict to painting in only one
times, dates, seasons and by locations.
climate, one area if you can move around? The world has so much colour to offer. The light between Glasgow and Edinburgh is not the same. And the light in Cambridge is very close to that of Edinburgh. There is a difference between north light and south light, but west to east also. You must take into consideration the amount of land mass or water that there is in the view you are looking at, the altitude of the land, its proximity to the ocean, and the amount of moisture in the air… 13
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Geoff Uglow in his Cornish studio beside Regina et Dux (Queen and Duke) (cat. 1), 2021 15
The Rose Garden
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1. Regina et Dux (Queen and Duke) oil on linen, 210 x 360 cm 18
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2. Thalia oil on linen, 80 x 80 cm 20
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3. Mutabilis oil on board, 51 x 51 cm 22
4. Le Coussin de Josephine oil on board, 61 x 71 cm 23
5. Silver Moon oil on board, 41 x 41 cm 24
6. Roman de la Rose oil on board, 51 x 61 cm 25
7. Cubile Hiems (Bed of Winter) oil on linen, 220 x 180 cm 26
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8. Jean-Jacques Rousseau oil on board, 51 x 51 cm 28
9. Rosa Dew oil on board, 61 x 71 cm 29
10. Ausonius oil on board, 41 x 41 cm 30
11. Noisette oil on board, 61 x 71 cm 31
Italy
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12. Italian Garden, Afternoon, 17/07/21 oil on paper, 38.5 x 28 cm 34
13. Italian Garden, Evening, 18/07/21 oil on paper, 38 x 28 cm 35
14. The Road to Sorrate, 25/07/21 oil on board, 30.5 x 26 cm 36
15. Italian Garden, Thunder, 16/07/21 oil on paper, 39.5 x 24 cm 37
16. The Tiber Valley, Afternoon oil on paper, 26 x 30.5 cm 38
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17. Italian Rose, Otricoli II oil on paper, 28 x 38.5 cm 40
18. Italian Rose, Otricoli IV oil on paper, 28 x 38.5 cm 41
19. Italian Rose, Otricoli III oil on paper, 28 x 38.5 cm 42
20. Italian Rose, Otricoli I oil on paper, 28 x 38.5 cm 43
21. Santa Catarina, Porto Ercole, 20/09/20 watercolour, 38 x 50 cm 44
22. Porto Ercole, 21/09/20 watercolour, 38 x 50 cm 45
The Sea
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23. 11/11/2020, 3:41pm, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 35 x 41 cm 48
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24. 27/01/21 I, 3:52pm, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 24 x 31 cm 50
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25. 19/11/2020, 5:11pm, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 24 x 36 cm 52
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26. 30/12/2020, 4:29pm, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 24 x 36 cm 54
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27. 10/12/2020, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 15 x 17 cm 56
28. 12/12/2020, 5:56pm, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 24 x 36 cm 57
29. 03/01/2021, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 15 x 17 cm 58
30. 01/01/2021, 4:30pm, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 24 x 36 cm 59
31. 22/02/2021, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 15 x 17 cm 60
32. 27/01/21 II, 5:02pm, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 24 x 31 cm 61
33. 17/11/2020, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 15 x 17 cm 62
34. 16/11/2020, 4:42pm, Beaufort Lundy oil on board, 25 x 37 cm 63
35. 24/09/20, 4:36 pm
36. 24/09/20, 4:28 pm
watercolour, 9.5 x 9.5 cm
watercolour, 9.5 x 9.5 cm
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37. 24/09/20, 4:33 pm
38. 25/09/20, 4:00 pm
watercolour, 9.5 x 9.5 cm
watercolour, 9.5 x 9.5 cm 65
39. 24/09/20, 4:29 pm
40. 24/09/20, 4:56 pm
watercolour, 9.5 x 9.5 cm
watercolour, 9.5 x 9.5 cm
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41. 24/09/20, 4:55 pm
42. 24/09/20, 4:48 pm
watercolour, 9.5 x 9.5 cm
watercolour, 9.5 x 9.5 cm 67
Geoff Uglow Born 1978 1997–2000 B.A. Hons (First Class), Fine Art; Painting, Glasgow School of Art 1996–97
Foundation (Distinction), Falmouth School of Art
Solo Exhibitions 2022
The Ploughman, The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
2019
Era di Marzo, John Cabot University, Rome
2017
The Rose Garden, Vol 1, MMXVI, The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
2016
A Room of Small Paintings, The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
2015
MMXIV, Connaught Brown, London
2014
Next Year’s Buds, The Last Year’s Seed, The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
2013
Quercus Robur, Connaught Brown, London
2012
Quercus Robur, Beck and Eggeling, Dusseldorf
2012
Connaught Brown, London
2011
Letters from Barra, The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh
2010
Coda, Connaught Brown, London
2010
Coda, Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh
2008
Fathom, Connaught Brown, London
2007
Being Here Now, The Edinburgh Gallery, Edinburgh
2006
Roger Billcliffe Gallery, Glasgow
2006
Roman Landscapes, The Edinburgh Gallery, Edinburgh
2005
Spent Light, The Edinburgh Gallery, Edinburgh
2002
Nor Loch Veiled, The Edinburgh Gallery, Edinburgh
2001
Recent Paintings, Roger Billcliffe Gallery, Glasgow
2001
Florence, The Edinburgh Gallery, Edinburgh
1999
Guyana Paintings, Assembly Gallery, Glasgow
Selected Group Exhibitions 2021
Andiamo, Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh
2021
Mythologies, Neon Gallery, London
2015
Ein Baum Ist Ein Baum, Beck and Eggeling, Dusseldorf, Germany
2015
View from the Edge of the Soul, Durden and Ray, Los Angeles, USA
2013
Body and Soul, Beck and Eggeling, Art Cologne
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2010
Scotland and Rome, Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh
2006
Responding to Rome: British Artists in Rome, 1995–2005, Estorick Collection, London
2004
Melt, The British School at Rome
2004
Compass, Sala 1, Rome
2003
Fine Arts, The British School at Rome
2002
Academia Nazionale di San Luca, Rome
2002
Laing Art Competition, Mall Gallery, London
2001
Hunting Art Exhibition, Royal College of Art, London
2000
Young Scottish Painters, Phillips, Edinburgh
2000
The Changing Room, Stirling
1998
Royal Glasgow Institute Annual Exhibition
Awards and Residencies 2015
Royal Scottish Academy Award, RSA Open
2009
Alastair Salvesen Painting and Travel Scholarship, Royal Scottish Academy
2002–04
Sainsbury Scholarship, The British School at Rome
2002
John Murray Thomson Award
2002
RAS N S Macfarlane Charitable Trust Award
2001
David Cargill Award
2000
The John Cunningham Award
2000
James Torrance Memorial Award
2000
The Murdoch Gibbons Postgraduate Prize
2000
The McKendrick Scholarship
2000
Royal Scottish Academy Landscape Award
1998
Armour Painting Prize
Collections Art in Healthcare, Edinburgh Kelvingrove Museum, Glasgow Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh
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Published by The Scottish Gallery to coincide with the exhibition Geoff Uglow The Ploughman 6–29 January 2022 Exhibition can be viewed online at www.scottish-gallery.co.uk/geoffuglow ISBN: 978-1-912900-45-9 © foreword by Guy Peploe and The Ploughman by Geoff Uglow Produced by The Scottish Gallery Designed by Kenneth Gray Photography by John McKenzie Printed by Pureprint Group All rights reserved. No part of this catalogue may be reproduced in any form by print, photocopy or by any other means, without the permission of the copyright holders and of the publishers. All essays and picture notes copyright The Scottish Gallery.
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