Ballachulish Quarries

John Guthrie Spence Smith

DESCRIPTION

Smith mainly painted landscapes and townscapes, depicting Scotland, with a strong sense of design and bold use of colour, Ballachulish Quarries included.

DETAILS
  • Artist

    John Guthrie Spence Smith

  • Date

    c.1921

  • Medium

    Oil on canvas

  • Object number

    862

  • Dimensions unframed

    87.6 × 100.3 cm

  • Dimensions framed

    107 × 119 cm

  • Place depicted

    Ballachulish (2656569)

  • Marks

    Signed bottom right

  • Subject

    Landscape

ARTIST PROFILE

John Guthrie Spence Smith, 1880-1951

A landscape and architectural painter, Smith was born in Perth, Scotland. As a child, an attack of scarlet fever robbed him of speech and hearing and attended a specialist school in Dundee to compensate for this. He studied at Edinburgh School of Art and at the Royal Scottish Academy's Life Class, where Robert Burns and Charles Hodge Mackie were important influences. D.M. Sutherland was a fellow student. Both exhibited at the Edinburgh Group's early exhibitions in 1912 and 1913 and at the re-formed group's three exhibitions in 1919-21. Spence Smith exhibited regularly throughout his career at the Royal Scottish Academy and the Royal Glasgow Institute of Fine Arts. He painted mostly landscapes and townscapes. Apart from two visits with his mother in 1911 and 1912 to northern France, based in Étaples, then a favourite painting ground of the Colourists, he spent all his life in Scotland.