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Image Credits

  • Andrew McPherson
© 2024, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

© 2024, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Foreword ix
  4. Main Abbreviations and Text Conventions xi
  5. Note on the Dates and Titles of Images xii
  6. Preface xv
  7. Preview xxi
  8. 1 Introduction
  9. Introduction: ‘Something Generative . . . was Happening’ 1
  10. Modernity, Modernism and the Countryman Fiction 4
  11. Patronage, Cultural Politics, Mentors, Intuition and Chance 10
  12. Haddington and Edinburgh Reconsidered 14
  13. ‘Leading Artists and Sculptors of the Modern School’: Gillies in Context 18
  14. Methods, Sources and Organisation 23
  15. 2 Origins and Childhood
  16. Introduction: Perspectives on Family and Change 27
  17. Town, City, Asylum: The Family Diaspora, Mid-1800s to 1910 29
  18. The Educational Ladder 39
  19. Primary-school Friendships, 1903–10 41
  20. Secondary-school Dux, 1910–16 44
  21. Conclusion 48
  22. 3 Childhood Sensibility
  23. Preview 50
  24. Eclectic Memories 52
  25. Learning to Picture: Childhood Mentors, 1910–16 54
  26. Seventy-one Pictures: The Visual Evidence 58
  27. The Emergent Sensibility 65
  28. 4 The Afterlife of War
  29. Introduction: The Silence of the Survivor 72
  30. Haldane and Haddington, 1905–16: Test-bed for a Modern Army 73
  31. To the Trenches and Back, 1917–19 79
  32. Infantry Private and Artist: Preview of a Future Self 81
  33. Fiction and Experience: The Existential Legacy 86
  34. Back to College, 1919–23 91
  35. Time Bent Back: The Legacy Extended 95
  36. 5 The Family Economy
  37. Preview 100
  38. Supported by Sisters: The Family Pact, 1920–9 101
  39. Edinburgh Years: Retrenchment, Insecurity and Loss, 1930–9 104
  40. The Flight to Temple Village in 1939 109
  41. Promotion, Security and Selling-up in Edinburgh, 1946–8 115
  42. 6 Kailyard and Kin
  43. Modernism or Sentimentality? J. M. Barrie, Hugh MacDiarmid and Kirriemuir 118
  44. A ‘Spot where Pilgrimages are Made’: The Family-origins Story 121
  45. Divergent Family Values: Recasting Past and Future 125
  46. Lived Modernity: Scepticism, Mutuality, Science and Gender 133
  47. ‘Grown Silent’: When Experience Controverts Narrative 138
  48. 7 Bohemian Edinburgh
  49. Introduction: Public Images, Private Lives 142
  50. The Society of Eight and Dead Men’s Shoes 146
  51. Munch, Decadence, Scandal and Herbert Read 148
  52. Cultured Circles: Gilded, Catholic, Nationalist, Gay 152
  53. Frustrated Love in Oslo, Edinburgh and the French Riviera 162
  54. An Audience Schooled in Modernist Sophistications 165
  55. 8 Emma, Janet and Margery
  56. Introduction: Aspects of Thyroid Disease 172
  57. Emma Smith Gillies: Potter, Feminist, Casualty 175
  58. Living and Dying with Misdiagnoses 183
  59. ‘Sweet on Gillies’: The Artist and Margery Porter 187
  60. 9 Portraits
  61. Introduction: ‘To Whisper Rather than to State’ 193
  62. The 1920s: Keeping his Hand In 195
  63. The 1930s: Sacred and Profane, Playful and Confessional 201
  64. Artist and Mirror: Facing Present, Future and Past 214
  65. 10 Landscapes and Still Lifes, 1925–39
  66. Overview: ‘A Charter of Liberty’ 229
  67. Cubism in Paris, Edinburgh and London 235
  68. Shaken by Munch: The Disintegrated Landscape 247
  69. The Emergent Idiom: Perception, Abstraction and Klee 258
  70. The ‘Tree in the Field’: Perception, Introspection and Imaging 286
  71. Beyond Mere Appearance: Still Life and Existential Crisis 294
  72. 11 Later Still Lifes
  73. Introduction and Overview: Abstraction and the ‘Curious Gap’ 305
  74. Hundreds of Still Lifes: Trends, 1925–73 307
  75. Wartime: ‘Just What the Times Demand’ 312
  76. The 1955 RSA Diploma Painting 318
  77. Life and Death in Abstraction, 1947–60 321
  78. Inner and Outer Worlds, 1960–72 343
  79. 12 Later Landscapes in Oil
  80. Introduction: Temple Continuities, 1940–9 355
  81. Dispersed Forms of Imagination: The Borders, 1949–60 366
  82. Visual Summations, 1960–72 384
  83. 13 Politics, Patronage and Later Landscapes on Paper
  84. Introduction: ‘A Curious Exaltation’ 395
  85. The Works on Paper, 1940–72 397
  86. The Edinburgh Festival, Nationalism and the Countryman Fiction 404
  87. The Countryman and the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art 417
  88. Conclusions 420
  89. Timeline 426
  90. All Abbreviations 441
  91. Notes 447
  92. Details of Illustrations 693
  93. List of Works 720
  94. Select Bibliography 790
  95. Indicative Primary Sources 791
  96. References 792
  97. Image Credits 826
  98. Permissions 827
  99. Acknowledgements 829
  100. Index of Gillies’ Artworks 832
  101. General Index 846
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