Elizabeth Blackadder was known to be a lifelong flower lover who kept a collection of local flowers as a child. She kept a sketchbook to record each variety of flower she kept in her garden. In this painting. David Mackie’s depiction captures the variety of colours that would have been found in Blackadder’s garden.
David Michie
c. 1982
Oil on canvas
3226
132 × 152 cm
Ⓒ The Artist's Estate. All Rights Reserved 2019/Bridgeman Images
David Michie OBE RSA, 1928-2015
The youngest of the three sons of Anne Redpath, David Michie was born in St Raphael in the South of France. He returned to Scotland with his mother and brothers in 1934 and was brought up in Hawick, Roxburghshire. His studies at Edinburgh College of Art from 1946 to 1953 were interrupted by two years' National Service in the Royal Artillery. The award of the college's Senior Travelling Scholarship allowed him to paint in Italy in 1953 for a year. Michie taught drawing and painting at Gray's School of Art in Aberdeen from 1958 to 1962, when he joined the teaching staff of Edinburgh College of Art. He was Vice-Principal from 1974 to 1977, and Head of the School of Drawing and Painting from 1982 until his retirement in 1990. He held a Personal Chair at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh from 1988 until 1991, when he was created Professor Emeritus. He was then Visiting Professor to the Art Studio Department of the University of California in Santa Barbara.