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Sandy Smith | |
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Born | 2 August 1983 Dunbar, Scotland |
Nationality | Scottish |
Known for | Sculpture, installation, video, painting, book-works |
Awards | Fulbright Scholarship, New Work Scotland Project, Dewar Arts Award |
Website | www.sandysmith.co.uk |
Sandy Smith (born 2 August 1983) is a Scottish visual artist based in New York City.
Smith was born in the Scottish town of Dunbar and later moved to Glasgow to study Art at the Glasgow School of Art from 2001 to 2005. His first solo exhibition in Glasgow was in 2006. Since this time Smith has exhibited widely in Scotland and Internationally, to some critical success in Denmark and the USA. [1] He is the younger brother of professional Rock Climber Malcolm Smith
"Road Trip USA" During August 2008, Smith undertook a collaborative project with another Glasgow-based artist, Alex Gross, which saw them create 3 solo exhibitions during a 9000 miles road trip around the western United States. A project was organized by Smith and Gross, and funded by the Scottish Arts Council and the British Council. The trip was, in Sandy Smith's words, to be a "fast, flowing journey into optimism, failure, modernism, landscape and tourism, as well as a jovial examination of the artist's role in relation to these grand ideals". [2] The eleven-week trip resulted in three successful exhibitions in Seattle, [1] Las Vegas and Utah, [3] and lead to the pair being awarded a New Work Scotland award at Edinburgh's Collective Gallery, where their final collaborative exhibition was held in December 2008. This exhibition was also documented in Art Review. [4]
"Junior: A monument in film making history" is the title of an essay commissioned by the artist from an academic essay writing company. In May 2007, the essay was to prove that Junior is the best film ever made, and reference various philosophers and thinkers such as Roland Barthes, Jean Baudrillard, Michel Foucault, Sigmund Freud and Marc Augé amongst others. The essay itself is available to download from a website Smith set up specifically to host this project, www.juniorbestfilmever.info. The topic has also spurred a competition where the public is invited to submit their own take on why the film should be considered the greatest ever made, with cash prizes available for the winning entries. In February 2008, despite Sunday Herald covering the story, [5] the competition received fewer entries than there were prizes available, and the competition has been ‘infinitely extended’ according to Smith's website.
Charles Rennie Mackintosh was a Scottish architect, designer, water colourist and artist. His artistic approach had much in common with European Symbolism. His work, alongside that of his wife Margaret Macdonald, was influential on European design movements such as Art Nouveau and Secessionism and praised by great modernists such as Josef Hoffmann. Mackintosh was born in Glasgow and died in London. He is among the most important figures of Modern Style.
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Alexander "Sandy" Stoddart is a Scottish sculptor, who, since 2008, has been the Queen's Sculptor in Ordinary in Scotland. He works primarily on figurative sculpture in clay within the neoclassical tradition. Stoddart is best known for his civic monuments, including 10 feet (3.0 m) bronze statues of David Hume and Adam Smith, philosophers during the Scottish Enlightenment, on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh, and others of James Clerk Maxwell, William Henry Playfair and John Witherspoon. Stoddart says of his own motivation, "My great ambition is to do sculpture for Scotland", primarily through large civic monuments to figures from the country's past.
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Ronald Forbes RSA, RGI is an artist who is primarily a painter but who has also made films throughout his career. He is an academician of the Royal Scottish Academy, was elected a Professional Member of the Society of Scottish Artists in 1971 and a member of the Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts in 2013.
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