L'Obiou from the north-east

James Morrison

DESCRIPTION

Morrison's landscape painting shows The Grande Tête de l'Obiou, the highest peak of the Dévoluy Mountains and the Dauphiné Prealps, in metropolitan France.

DETAILS
  • Artist

    James Morrison

  • Date

    1980

  • Medium

    Oil on board

  • Object number

    651

  • Dimensions unframed

    89 × 150 cm

  • Dimensions framed

    105.5 × 166 × 5 cm

  • Marks

    Dated

  • Subject

    Landscape

  • Copyright

    Ⓒ The Artist's Estate

ARTIST PROFILE

James Morrison RSA RSW, 1932-2020

Born in Glasgow, Morrison studied at Glasgow School of Art under David Donaldson from 1950 to 1954. He taught part-time there until 1958, when he moved to Catterline, near Stonehaven, Kincardineshire. He was visiting artist at Hospitalfield in Arbroath, Angus, in 1962-63. In 1965 he became a teacher at Duncan Jordanstone College of Art in Dundee. He visited Greece on an Arts Council travelling scholarship in 1968 and has travelled widely in France. In 1987 he resigned as Head of Department to concentrate on his painting. 

Morrison is best known for his panoramic landscapes, particularly of Angus and Canada, many spectacular cloud formations. He is also noted for his paintings of Glasgow's Victorian tenements and terraces, which he started as a student and continued until about 1980.