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Craigie Aitchison

1926 Born 13 January at 12 India Street, Edinburgh. Younger son of Craigie Mason Aitchison KC and Charlotte Forbes Aitchison née Jones. Baptised by his grandfather, the Revd James Aitchison, a minister in Falkirk.

1929 Father appointed Lord Advocate for Scotland, first Labour politician to

hold the post; elected MP for Kilmarnock and made Privy Counsellor.

1930s Holidays with family on the Isle of Arran.

1933 Father raised to bench and appointed Lord Justice-Clerk of Scotland.

1936 Attends Loretto School, Musselburgh, as a boarding pupil along with elder brother Raymund.

1939-4 Family moves temporarily to manse near the “Dunmore Pineapple” on mother’s family estate near Stirling.

1941 Father, Lord Aitchison PC KC, dies. Leaves Loretto School. Attends Basil Paterson & Ainslie, Tutors, Edinburgh.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1943 Leaves Basil Paterson with average grades in English Language, English Literature, French, History and Religious Knowledge; achieves credit in Latin enabling future study of law.

Conscripted but immediately discharged on medical grounds.

1944 Enrols at University of Edinburgh to study law. Studies British History

and Jurisprudence until 1946.

1948 Moves to London and takes lodgings in Montpelier Walk. Enrols at Middle Temple, City of London, to study law. Sits examinations in British History, Public International and Roman Law.

1950 Converts mews house in Church Lane, Edinburgh, behind family home in India Street into studio. Paints mostly still-lives. Shows very first pictures at Elizabeth Bell Flower Shop next-door to studio.

1951 In London takes private tuition from artist Adrian Daintrey. Copies Augustus John portrait in Tate Gallery.

1951-2 Moves into lodgings at 19 Adam’s Row, Mayfair. Copies painting of a view of Dieppe by Fauvist master Albert Marquet.

1952 Takes private tuition from artist Gerald Frankl. Applies to the Slade

School of Art to study as part-time fee-paying student in August. Accepted at Slade School and begins attending classes three days per week in October. Frequents Orange Street pub along with Euan Uglow,

Myles Murphy and friends.

1953 Moves from Gloucester Place, Marlyebone, first to Portobello Road and

from there to Gower Street. Increases study at Slade School to six days per week. Moves to Slade Hostel, Cartwright Gardens, near Euston.

Eighteen months later moves with fellow students Myles Murphy to 22a Lower Marsh, near Waterloo Station, London.

Wins Slade School prize (the book Artists on Art, compiled by Robert Goldwater and Maria Treves) for still-life painting, Scissors and Pink String. Subsequently destroys painting.

1954 Wins Italian Government scholarship to travel in Italy. Spends two- and-half months travelling first to Rome, and then through Tuscany and Umbria to Venice, returning home via Munich, Amsterdam and Brussels.

 

1956 Shows in Gallery One, London, in exhibition entitled Three Romantic

Painters. Leaves Lower Marsh and returns to Scotland.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1958-63 Paints series of landscapes at Tulliallan, near Kincardine-on-Forth, Fife.

Paints first Crucifixion, the beginning of an ongoing series of works on this theme.

1959 On recommendation of painter Michael Andrews, taken up by dealer Helen Lessore and shows for first time at Beaux Arts Gallery, Bruton Place, London.

1960 Shows for second time at Beaux Arts Gallery.

1962 Meets professional model Georgeous Macaulay while teaching part- time at Regent Street Polytechnic. Begins extended series of nudes and

portraits lasting until 1976.

1963 Returns from Scotland with mother, Lady Aitchison, to live full-time in London.

1964 Shows for third and final time at Beaux Arts Gallery. Gallery closes down a year later.

1965 Lawrence Gowing, Principal of Chelsea School of Art, allows Craigie to

use large studio in school during the summer. Paints large-scale nudes. First works, Nudes against a Blue Background, purchased by Arts Council of Great Britain.

1968 Begins teaching part-time at Chelsea School of Art. Meets model Daphne Charlton and begins series of nudes and portraits.

1970 Mother dies in London. Awarded Edwin Austin Premier Scholarship for Painting.

1971 Sees first Bedlington terrier at Crufts and buys Wayney.

1975 With help from writer John McEwen, acquires SPACE studio on fifth floor of building overlooking Cambridge Circus. Introduced to American writer and journalist Lendel Scott-Ellis by friend Ann Barr. Begins series of nude studies and portraits of her.

Acquires a house at Montecastelli near Siena. Spends eighteen months working in Italy.

1977 Meets eighty-five-year-old retired boxer, David Smith, known as Chicago, and begins series of portraits.

1978 Elected Associate Member of the Royal Academy of Arts.

1981-2 Arts Council of Great Britain holds retrospective exhibition of work at the Serpentine Gallery, London. Subsequently tours.

1982 Painting Chicago, a film about Craigie Aitchison produced to coincide with retrospective at Serpentine Gallery.

1986 Designs neckties and ceramics for the Royal Academy of Arts.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1987 Meets Naaotwa Swayne, wife of friend, composer Giles Swayne, and begins extended series of portraits.

1987-9 Exhibits at the Albermarle Gallery, London.

1988 Elected Member of Royal Academy of Arts.

1993 Returns for the first time since childhood to Isle of Arran and begins large landscapes.

1996 Craigie: The Art of Craigie Aitchison held at Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow. Commissioned by National Portrait Gallery, London, to paint portrait, possibly of athlete Linford Christie.

 

 

 

Awards

1994 The Jerwood Prize

1989 Korn Ferry International Award, Royal Academy of Arts

1984 First Johnson Wax Prize, Royal Academy of Arts

1976 Arts Council of Great Britain bursary

1974-75 Lorne Scholarship

1974 Prizewinner John Moores Liverpool Exhibition

1970 Edwin Austin Abbey Premier Scholarship

1965 Arts Council of Great Britain purchase award

1955 British Council Italian Government Scholarship

1953 The Slade School annual prize for best still-life

 

Solo Exhibitions

2003 'Craigie Aitchison', Royal Academy, London, opening October

2001 ‘Craigie Aitchison’, The Museum of Modern Art, Powys, Wales

‘Craigie Aitchison : Italian and other paintings’, Timothy Taylor Gallery and Waddington Galleries

2000 Galeria Ramis Barquet, New York

1998 Timothy Taylor Gallery and Waddington Galleries,catalogue essay by John McEwen; conversation with Andrew Lambirth

1997 Commissioned to paint Calvary for Liverpool Cathedral

1996 ‘Craigie: The Art of Craigie Aitchison’, Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow. Commissioned to paint Calvary for Truro Cathedral

1994 ‘Spirit of Lamlash: The Paintings of Craigie Aitchison 1954-1994’,

Terrace Gallery, Harewood House, Leeds, catalogue essay by Mary Sara Crucifixion on loan to King’s College Chapel Cambridge from the Jerwood Foundation

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1993 ‘Craigie Aitchison, New Paintings’, Thomas Gibson Fine Art, London, catalogue introduction by John McEwen

1989 ‘Craigie Aitchison: Recent Paintings’, Albermarle Gallery, London,

Interview by Andrew Lambirth

1987 Albermarle Gallery, London, catalogue introduction by Patrick Kinmonth

1985 Artis Monte Carlo, Monaco

1981-92 Arts Council Retrospective Exhibition, Serpentine Gallery, London; Midland Group, Nottingham; City Museum and Art Gallery, Old Portsmouth; Central Library Exhibition Gallery, Milton Keynes; Museums & Art Gallery, Bolton. Catalogue introduction by Helen Lessore; essay by John McEwen

1981 David Grob Fine Art, London

1979 Kettle’s Yard Gallery, Cambridge, catalogue introduction by John McEwen

1977 M. Knoedler & Co. Ltd, London

1975 Rutland Gallery, London, catalogue introduction by Helen Lessore

‘Craigie Aitchison: Recent Paintings’, Scottish Arts Council, Edinburgh, catalogue introduction by Helen Lessore

1971 Basil Jacobs Gallery, London

1970 Compass Gallery, Glasgow, catalogue introduction by Helen Lessore

1968 Marlborough Fine Arts Ltd, London

1964 Beaux Arts Gallery, London

1960 Beaux Arts Gallery, London

1959 Beaux Arts Gallery, London

 

Selected Group Exhibitions

1994 ‘Five Protagonists: Craigie Aitchison, Anthony Eyton, Patrick George,

Myles Murphy, Euan Uglow’, Browse & Darby, London, catalogue essay, ‘A Common Pursuit’, by Andrew Lambirth

1993 ‘Images of Christ’, Arts Council touring exhibition, Northampton Museum & Art Gallery; St Paul’s Cathedral, London

1992 British Figurative Painting of the 20th Century’, The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, British Council

1991 Castlefield Gallery, Manchester

‘Art in Worship’ Catalogue essay, Seen and Unseen, by Don Cupitt;

Commentaries by Sister Wendy Beckett, Tewkesbury Abbey, Worcester Cathedral

1989 ‘Faces of Britain: An Exhibition of Figurative Painting 1949-89 for China’,British Council

‘New Ikons’ Mead Gallery, University of Warwick touring exhibition ‘A Spiritual Dimension’ Peterborough Museum & Art Gallery touring exhibition

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1988 ‘Graven Images: Art, Religion and Politics’, Harris Museum & Art

Gallery, Preston

‘Jeffrey Camp: A Personal Choice’, Nigel Greenwood Gallery, London

1987 ‘The Glass of Vision: Seven Artists in a Christian Context:

Craigie Aitchison, Jane Dowling, Donald Johnson, John Piper, Michael

Renton, John Skelton, Richard Webb’, Chichester Cathedral, catalogue foreword by The Very Revd Robert Holtby, Dean of Chichester

1985 ‘The Hard-Won Image’, Tate Gallery, London

1984-85 ‘The Singular Vision’, Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter

1984 ‘The Proper Study’, British Council Exhibition Lalit Kala Akademi, Dehli

1982 ‘Prophecy and Vision’, Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol

1979 Artists’ Market, London

1975 Contemporary Art Society Art Fair, Mall Galleries, London

‘23rd Salon Actualité de l’Esprit’, Centre d’Accueil de l’Université de Paris

1974 ‘British Painting ‘74’, Hayward Gallery, London

1969-70 Cunard Marlborough London Gallery, (on board QE2)

1969 ‘Modern British Painters’, Tokyo

1967 ‘Il Tempo dell’Imagine’, Second International Biennale, Bologna

1964 ‘Gulbenkian Foundation’, Tate Gallery, London

1958-61 ‘New Paintings’, Arts Council Touring Exhibition

1956 ‘Three Romantic Painters’, Gallery One, Londo

1954 ‘Six Young Contemporaries’, Gimpel Fils, London

 

 

Public and Corporate Collections

Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museum

The Arts Council of Great Britain

Birmingham

 

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