Scotland's Tay Country
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National Collecting Scheme Scotland National
National Collecting Scheme Scotland National Collecting Scheme Scotland is an initiative that supports public collections across Scotland to acquire and present challenging contemporary visual art. The initiative also seeks to enable curators within those organisations to extend their knowledge and understanding of contemporary visual arts, and to develop their engagement with the visual arts sector in Scotland. Scotland is home to some very fine public collections, which are of local, national and international significance. It is the aim of the NCSS that those public collections are able to reflect the range and vibrancy of contemporary art created here and abroad, that they can help build new audiences for the contemporary visual arts, as well as engage and work with artists and visual arts organisations. Some facts : • NCSS is an initiative of the Scottish Arts Council. • Currently NCSS has seven museum partners. These are Aberdeen Art Gallery, McManus Galleries, Dundee, Edinburgh City Art Centre, Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow, Hunterian Art Gallery, Paisley Museum and Art Gallery, and the Pier Arts Centre, Orkney. • In its first phase - 2003-2006 - NCSS enabled a total of 122 acquisitions by six public collections (including craft in its first phase). In 2007-2008 a further 18 works of visual art have been acquired. The Scottish Arts Council will support further acquisitions in 2008-2009. • NCSS member were also involved in an innovative joint commissioning project – the first of its kind in the UK. They collaborated to commission Joanne Tatham & Tom O’Sullivan to create a substantial and ambitious new work of art for Scotland • Aberdeen Art Gallery hosted the Scotland & Venice exhibition December 2007- January 2008. -
Report To: Arts & Heritage Committee – 17 April 2000
REPORT TO: ARTS & HERITAGE COMMITTEE – 17 APRIL 2000 REPORT ON: DUNDEE REPERTORY THEATRE COMPANY – REVENUE GRANT 2000/2001 REPORT BY: DIRECTOR OF ARTS AND HERITAGE REPORT NO: 252/2000 1.0 PURPOSE OF REPORT 1.1 To submit to the Committee a request for renewal of revenue funding to Dundee Repertory Theatre Company (Main House) for the year 2000/2001. 2.0 RECOMMENDATIONS 2.1 It is recommended that the Committee approve the level of grant assistance set out in the Report. 3.0 FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS 3.1 The funding requested, as outlined at Appendix 1, is £245,243. Last year’s equivalent funding was £240,042, an increase of £5,201, which is 2.17%. 3.2 This expenditure will be met from Arts and Heritage 2000/2001 Revenue Budget. 3.3 The grant requested will be contained within a Funding Agreement 2000/2001 between Dundee City Council and Dundee Repertory Theatre Company. 4.0 LOCAL AGENDA 21 IMPLICATIONS 4.1 The renewal of revenue funding to Dundee Repertory Theatre will ensure the continued operation of a popular cultural facility, that local needs are met locally, and that opportunities for culture, leisure and recreation are readily available to all. 5.0 EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES IMPLICATIONS 5.1 The mission statement of Dundee Repertory Theatre is “to provide the highest possible performing arts service to Dundee and to be central to the cultural life of Dundee by investing in opportunities for those communities who may not normally benefit from mainstream arts provision”. New building works in 1999 created full disabled access to public areas. -
Angusalive What's On
What’s On October 2017 - March 2018 We’ve something for everyone! HEALTHY | ACTIVE | CREATIVE Libraries | Museums, Galleries & Archives | Sport & Leisure | Countryside Adventure | Theatre & Venues Dates for your diary National Coding Week Code Club Session 23 September Arbroath, Forfar and Free Carnoustie Libraries Bookbug All-In-One 4 October Monifieth Library Free 5 October Forfar Library Free 5 October Carnoustie Library Free 11 October Monifieth Library Free 12 October Forfar Library Free 12 October Carnoustie Library Free The Earl of Southesk in Saskatchewan - 1859 9 October Monifieth Library Free National Libraries Week 9 - 14 October All libraries Free ‘Discover something new in your Library’ Meet the Author 9 October Arbroath Library Free 10 October Forfar Library Free 11 October Carnoustie Library Free 12 October Kirriemuir Library Free Bookweek Scotland Extravaganza 29 November Reid Hall, Forfar Free December Capers Competition 1 - 24 December All libraries Free Bookbug’s Christmas Adventure 15 December Mobile Library at Crombie Park Free Meet local storyTELLEr - robbie Fotheringham 18 December Forfar Library Free Harry Potter Book Nights 1 February Kirriemuir Library Free 5 February Montrose Library Free 5 February Carnoustie Library Free 5 February Monifieth Library Free 5 February Arbroath Library Free 5 February Forfar Library Free 5 February Brechin Library Free World Book Day 2018 26 February - 3 March All libraries Free Children and Schooling in Olden Times 5 March Monifieth Library Free 6 March Kirriemuir Library Free -
NHS Tayside CONSULTANT PSYCHIATRIST
NHS Tayside CONSULTANT PSYCHIATRIST General Adult Psychiatry VACANCY Consultant in General Adult Psychiatry (x2 posts) Wedderburn House / Carseview Centre: Dundee Community Mental Health Team 40 hours per week £80,653 (GBP) to £107,170 (GBP) per annum Tenure: Permanent NHS Tayside is looking for committed, innovative and enthusiastic Consultant Psychiatrists (full or part time) to join our Community Mental Health Team based in Dundee the ‘City of Discovery’. These posts include opportunities to see and treat a wide variety of psychiatric disorders in patients aged from eighteen to sixty-five years old, with the support of our enthusiastic and well staffed multi-disciplinary and multi- agency social work and health Community Mental Health Team with access to our 20 bed inpatient unit. We have local drug and alcohol, forensic, eating disorder, liaison and advanced intervention services as well as psychotherapy and psychology services available for our patients, and enjoy excellent relations with our local General Practitioners and voluntary service colleagues. There are many learning and training opportunities, including the teaching and supervision of 4th year medical students and Specialty Trainees attached to our team. There is a monthly continuing professional development programme and other continuing professional development will also be encouraged. Active involvement in service improvement is available through membership of our Service Improvement Group. We have close links with the University of Dundee division of Neuroscience where academic and research opportunities are available: http://medicine.dundee.ac.uk/medical-research-institute/divisions/division- neuroscience. Dundee is a coastal city on the Firth of Tay estuary in eastern Scotland. Its regenerated waterfront has the new Victoria and Albert Museum which stands on the banks of the Tay and two nautical museums: RRS Discovery, Captain Scott’s Antarctic expedition ship, and 19th-century warship, HM Frigate Unicorn. -
List of Scottish Museums and Libraries with Strong Victorian Collections
Scottish museums and libraries with strong Victorian collections National Institutions National Library of Scotland National Gallery of Scotland National Museums Scotland National War Museum of Scotland National Museum of Costume Scottish Poetry Library Central Libraries The Mitchell Library, Glasgow Edinburgh Central Library Aberdeen Central Library Carnegie Library, Ayr Dick Institute, Kilmarnock Central Library, Dundee Paisley Central Library Ewart Library, Dumfries Inverness Library University Libraries Glasgow University Library University of Strathclyde Library Edinburgh University Library Sir Duncan Rice Library, Aberdeen University of Dundee Library University of St Andrews Library Municipal Art Galleries and Museums Kelvingrove Art Gallery, Glasgow Burrell Collection, Glasgow Aberdeen Art Gallery McManus Galleries, Dundee Perth Museum and Art Gallery Paisley Museum & Art Galleries Stirling Smith Art Gallery & Museum Stewartry Museum, Kirkcudbright V & A Dundee Shetland Museum Clydebank Museum Mclean Museum and Art Gallery, Greenock Hunterian Art Gallery & Museum Piers Art Centre, Orkney City Art Centre, Edinburgh Campbeltown Heritage Centre Montrose Museum Inverness Museum and Art Gallery Kirkcaldy Galleries Literary Institutions Moat Brae: National Centre for Children’s Literature Writers’ Museum, Edinburgh J. M. Barrie Birthplace Museum Industrial Heritage Summerlee: Museum of Scottish Industrial Life, North Lanarkshire Riverside Museum, Glasgow Scottish Maritime Museum Prestongrange Industrial Heritage Museum, Prestonpans Scottish -
Histoire Des Collections Numismatiques Et Des Institutions Vouées À La Numismatique
HISTOIRE DES COLLECTIONS NUMISMATIQUES ET DES INSTITUTIONS VOUÉES À LA NUMISMATIQUE Numismatic Collections in Scotland Scotland is fortunate in possessing two major cabinets of international signifi- cance. In addition over 120 other institutions, from large civic museums to smaller provincial ones, hold collections of coins and medals of varying size and impor- tance. 1 The two main collections, the Hunterian held at the University of Glasgow, and the national collection, housed at the National Museums of Scotland in Edinburgh, nicely complement each other. The former, based on the renowned late 18th centu- ry cabinet of Dr. William Hunter, contains an outstanding collection of Greek and Roman coins as well as important groups of Anglo-Saxon, medieval and later English, and Scottish issues along with a superb holding of medals. The National Museums of Scotland house the largest and most comprehensive group of Scottish coins and medals extant. Each collection now numbers approximately 70,000 speci- mens. The public numismatic collections from the rest of Scotland, though perhaps not so well known, are now recorded to some extent due to a National Audit of the coun- try’s cultural heritage held by museums and galleries carried out by the Scottish Museums Council in 2001 on behalf of the Scottish Government. 2 Coins and Medals was one of 20 collections types included in the questionnaire, asking for location, size and breakdown into badges, banknotes, coins, medals, tokens, and other. Over 12 million objects made up what was termed the Distributed National Collection, of which 3.3% consisted of approximately 68,000 coins and medals in the National Museums concentrated in Edinburgh and 345,000 in the non-nationals throughout the rest of the country. -
Lost Man Blues: Jon Schueler – Art and War
Exhibition Proposal Lost Man Blues: Jon Schueler – Art and War Wing Shadow Over Grey Sea, 1982, 72” x 65” (o/c 1248) Curated by Marissa Roth Lost Man Blues: Jon Schueler – Art and War Lost Man Blues Romasaig, Scotland, September 1988 Oil on canvas 18 x 16 in / 45.72 x 40.64 cm (o/c 1549) The title of this painting refers to the loss of a plane in Schueler’s squadron on the return to England after a bombing mission over Germany. Lost Man Blues JON SCHUELER – Art and War Curated by Marissa Roth When reflecting on the arc of an artist’s life and career, we find that his or her own words and thoughts provide the most telling details and authentic backdrop to the work and convey its full breadth. Because of the physical nature of art, it can only tell part of the story at any one time. But the binding together of years of personal writings reveals the artistic journey in its totality and offers the most meaningful context. Jon Schueler (1916-1992), the esteemed prolific American Abstract Expressionist painter from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was also a masterful writer. Over the course of three decades, he wrote thousands of pages and deliberately conserved them by date as a testimony of his life. This self-portrait in words - reflections, ruminations, personal letters and business correspondence - is an acutely self-aware record of his creative process and mirrors his breathtaking output as a painter. Through these writings lovingly edited by his widow Magda Salvesen, and editor Diane Cousineau, we hear his voice and understand his innermost creative struggles. -
Minutes of Meetings of Dundee Corporation and Its Committees for the Period 10Th November 1944 to 1St November 1945 Inclusive
MINUTES OF MEETINGS OF DUNDEE CORPORATION AND ITS COMMITTEES FOR THE PERIOD 10TH NOVEMBER 1944 TO 1ST NOVEMBER 1945 INCLUSIVE Committee Name Item Page No Water A.M.I.M.E. – Admission of Member of Technical Staff 959 Water A.R.P. – Winding up of Organisation and Disposal of Stores and Plant 958 Social Welfare Aberlour Orphanage – Maintenance Charges 456 Social Welfare Able-Bodied Unemployed Assistance – Scale of 30 Housing and Factorial (Housing) Acceleration of the Building of New Houses – DHS Circular No. 102/1945 1023 Transport Accident Claims 978, 1214 Works Accident on Streets – Claims for Compensation 1192 Lord Provost Accommodation for American soldiers visiting the City 932 Public Health Accommodation for Mental Defectives (Tealing House) 1232 Social Welfare Accommodation for Mental Defectives 669, 968 Lord Provost Accommodation for Transferred Workers – Central Register of Accommodation 652 Fleming Trust Accounts for Year 1944/45 945 Water Acquisition of Land under Dundee Corporation Order Confirmation Act, 1939 1197 Lord Provost Acts of Bravery – Bruce Irvine 752 Lord Provost Acts of Bravery – Felix McGuire 1295 Lord Provost Acts of Bravery – Miss Mary Langlands 515 Lord Provost Acts of Bravery – William J Bull and William Pirie and others 931 Cleansing Adding Machine – purchase of 54, 167 Education Additional Accommodation for Educational Purposes 1283 Transport Additional Bus Services 809 Transport Additional Double-Deck Buses 463 Water Additional Source of Water Supply – Establishment of Flow Gauges 899 Building Ind. Sub Comm. -
2004/1 (8) 1 Art on the Line
Art on the line NEWS – The Age of Titian in Edinburgh The Age of Titian: Venetian Renaissance Art opinion of Professor Peter Humfrey, of the from Scottish Collections is a major exhibi- University of St Andrews and guest curator of tion planned for the National Gallery of the exhbition, will nicely complement those in Scotland in Edinburgh from 4 August to 5 Edinburgh. Another little-known work from a December 2004. It will bring together the Scottish public collection is Bonifacio’s Sacra National Gallery’s own group of Venetian Conversazione in the McManus Art Gallery Cinquecento pictures, loaned to it since 1945 in Dundee. by the Dukes of Sutherland, and Edinburgh’s “The exhibition will also draw on a num- other Venetian pictures (including important ber of Scottish private collections. Despite works by Cariani, Jacopo Bassano, Moroni the sales and dispersals of the later nine- and Veronese – and even perhaps by teenth and twentieth centuries, Scotland Giorgione) plus those in Scotland’s other remains rich in collections such as those of principal public art gallery, that of Glasgow the Marquess of Bute or the Earl of Wemyss, (Kelvingrove and Burrell Collection). formed by Scottish noblemen in the Regency Some of the former Sutherland pictures, and Victorian periods,” said Professor including Tintoretto’s Entombment and Humfrey. “Some of these collections are very Lotto’s Virgin and Child with Saints, and now little known, and among the works that have also Titian’s Venus Anadyomene (figure 1), been promised to the exhibition are have in the meantime been acquired by the Savoldo’s Shepherd and Romanino’s National Gallery. -
Ideas to Inspire
Highland Perthshire and Dundee Follow the River Tay to the sea Dundee City Council © The Atholl Highlanders, Blair Castle Dundee Contemporary Arts Edradour Distillery, near Pitlochry Looking over Dundee and the River Tay from The Law Ideas to inspire Enjoy a wonderful 4-day countryside and city break in the east of Scotland. Within easy reach of Scotland’s central belt, the striking scenery, history and Brilliant events in Perthshire natural heritage of Highland Perthshire is perfectly complemented by the culture, parks, shopping and food and drink of a Dundee city break. May - Atholl Highlanders Parade & Gathering, Blair Castle July - Kenmore Highland Games Starting in the Pitlochry area, explore the history of elegant Blair Castle, then head for Loch Tummel and admire the wonderful Queen’s View with its July - GWCT Scottish Game Fair, Scone Palace, by Perth delightful Forestry Commission Scotland visitor centre. Neolithic history is the August - Aberfeldy Show & Games next stop as you marvel at the reconstructed Iron Age crannog at the Scottish August - Blair Castle International Horse Trials & Country Fair, Blair Atholl Crannog Centre. End the day with a visit to Dewar’s World of Whisky, where a October - Perthshire Amber Music Festival, various Perthshire venues tour of Aberfeldy Distillery blends perfectly with displays showcasing how Dewar’s has become one of the world’s favourite whiskies. October - The Enchanted Forest, Pitlochry Find out about these and other events at www.visitscotland.com/perthshire Day two begins with a stroll through the woodlands of The Hermitage near Dunkeld, towards the impressive Black Linn waterfall. Next, stop off at Stanley Mills and discover Perthshire’s fascinating industrial heritage, before heading to Perth to explore the absorbing Black Watch Museum. -
DAVID MICHIE Memorial Exhibition
DAVID MICHIE DAVID DAVID MICHIE Memorial Exhibition The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh DAVID MICHIE (1928-2015) Memorial Exhibition 1 March – 1 April 2017 16 Dundas Street · Edinburgh EH3 6HZ +44 (0) 131 558 1200 [email protected] www.scottish-gallery.co.uk Front cover: Summer Garden, 1990, oil on canvas, 132 x 152.5 cms (detail) (cat. 26) Left: Self Portrait II, c.1958, chalk drawing, 36.5 x 26.5 cms (detail) (cat. 6) FOREWORD A memorial exhibition should not be a sombre affair and with the subject being the life and work of David Michie our exhibition for March 2017 could not be anything but a joyous celebration, as the succeeding pages should attest. David was a devoted son to his mother Anne Redpath, the happiest of married men with his wife Eileen, the best of fathers to his girls (who have all our thanks for helping prepare this tribute) and a friend to so many, including succeeding staff at The Scottish Gallery. One of whom, Robin McClure, writes a warm introduction over the page. This generosity of heart sprang from David’s intense interest in people: he had much to say but always as part of a conversation. But whatever he was saying he was also looking, a sketchbook seldom far from hand and what he saw and remembered or recorded helped him develop his own visual language to describe many aspects of natural phenomena but also his own feelings. A natural modesty could make him a reluctant exhibitor but the exuberance and colour in his work seeks out the light and attests to a life well lived, full of optimism and creative fulfilment. -
Centenary Programme of Events
MARY SLESSOR CENTENARY 1848-1915 2 DECEMBER 1848 - 13 JANUARY 1915 CENTENARY PROGRAMME OF EVENTS Mary Slessor was an extraordinary woman. In her work as a missionary in the Calabar region of Nigeria, she demonstrated a rare ability to combine steely resolve and uncompromising strength with deep compassion and remarkable selflessness. She was both unconventional and inspirational. Design by Dundee City Council, Communications Division CONTENTS Welcome 3 Mary Slessor 4 Dundee in 1876 5 The Mary Slessor Foundation 6 Centenary Events 8 Commemorative Standing Stone Location 10 Selection 11 Preparation and Transportation 11 Excavation and Installation 12 Commemorative Plaques Making of the Plaques 13 Brief, Portrait, Pattern Making 13 Text Plaque Pattern, Sand Mould, Casting 14 Chasing, Patination 15 Installation 16 Stained Glass Memorial Window 17 Mother of All the Peoples 18 Mary Slessor Centenary Exhibition 19 Competitions 20 Thank You to Our Supporters 21 More Thanks 23 At the time of going to print all of the information in this publication was correct. Mary Slessor Foundation are not responsible for any changes made to any of the events that are outwith their control. 2 2015 marks the centenary of the death of Mary Slessor. The Mary Slessor Foundation in conjunction with a number of individuals, companies and organisations has arranged a series of events to commemorate this. Mary Slessor’s story is virtually unknown locally or nationally and one of our objectives in this centenary year is to change that. This initiative is intend- ed to raise her profile and also increase awareness of the work that the Foundation carries out in her name in a part of Africa in which she lived and worked, but also loved.