Molly Garnier
Molly Garnier, born at Salisbury, England in 1981, is an English artist.
Early life
From 1993 to 1999, Garnier was educated in England at Gresham's School, Holt, and then from 1999 in Scotland at the Edinburgh College of Art, where she gained a Bachelor of Arts degree with first class honours in Art and Design in 2003.[1] While a student, Garnier spent her summers travelling in Italy, Greece and Spain, staying in major European artistic cities. In 2000, she visited Thailand and Malaysia.[1]
Work
Garnier is principally a figurative painter, and is best known for her paintings of the female nude. She has said "I am concerned with the feeling, the impression, the revelation a painting gives you rather than actual realism",[2] and that she "explores the play of light and shadow on skin tones".[3] Some of her work is inspired by her latest travels, which include trips to the Himalayas and Rajasthan.[2]
The critic Moira Jeffrey has called Garnier's work "reminiscent of Degas and those Victorian photographs of women accidentally glimpsed in domestic surroundings".[3] Duncan MacMillan wrote in The Scotsman in 2003 of her "small smoky images of the female nude that are quite memorable"[4] and in 2004 of Garnier's "exquisite small nude paintings".[5]
Exhibitions
Garnier originally exhibited mostly in Scotland. In Edinburgh, at the Royal Society of Arts Annual Exhibition, the RSA's Visual Arts Scotland, the Royal College of Physicians,[6] the Leith Gallery, the Morningside Gallery, the Scottish Gallery, and the Phoenix 369 Gallery; and also at the Compass Gallery, Glasgow, the South Street Gallery, St Andrews, the Frames Gallery, Perth, the Cairns Gallery, Peebles, the Paisley Institute of Art and Design, Paisley, and the RendezVous Gallery, Aberdeen.[1] More recently she has exhibited regularly at the Lime Tree Gallery[7] in Long Melford, Suffolk, and Bristol. She has had three solo shows at Lime Tree Gallery, most recently in 2012.[8] In London, she has exhibited work at Painters' Hall,[9] the Northcote Gallery, the Air Gallery, and the Collyer-Bristow Gallery.[10]
An early solo exhibition was at Morston Hall, Norfolk, in 2003.[3]
Awards
- March, 2003: The W. Gordon Smith Award and the Linda Clark Nolan Award at the Royal Society of Arts[1]
- June, 2003: The Andrew Grant Bequest Travel Scholarship (Paris) of the Edinburgh College of Art[1]
- November, 2006: The Lynn Painter-Stainers Young Artist Award of the Worshipful Company of Painter-Stainers of London, for the painting Slow Dancing[1][11]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Biography of Molly Garnier at mollygarnier.co.uk (accessed 3 November 2007)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Welcome to the website of Molly Garnier at mollygarnier.co.uk (accessed 3 November 2007)
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Molly Garnier page at rendezvous-gallery.co.uk (accessed 3 November 2007)
- ↑ Artistic inspiration to the highest degree article by Duncan MacMillan in The Scotsman, 24 June 2003 (accessed 3 November 2007)
- ↑ Freudian Slick article by Duncan MacMillan in The Scotsman, 6 April 2004 (accessed 3 November 2007)
- ↑ Contemporary and Emerging Scottish Artists at rcpe.ac.uk (accessed 3 November 2007)
- ↑ "limetreegallery.com". limetreegallery.com. Retrieved 2013-07-04.
- ↑ "Molly Garnier - Lime Tree Gallery - Art Gallery in Suffolk, England, Frank Colclough, Claire Harrigan, Ian Humphreys, Peter King, Sylvia Paul, Kathy Ramsey Carr, Tristan Reid, Philip Richardson, Mats Rydstern, James Watt, Alma Wolfson, England". Lime Tree Gallery. Retrieved 2013-07-04.
- ↑ Lynn Painter-Stainers Prize Exhibition 2006 at parkerharris.co.uk (accessed 3 November 2007)
- ↑ Visions in Colour at the Collyer-Bristow Gallery (accessed 3 November 2007)
- ↑ Lynn Painter-Stainers Prize 2007: Call for Entries at painter-stainers.org (accessed 3 November 2007)
External links
- Molly Garnier at the-leith-gallery.co.uk
- Gallery of work at mollygarnier.co.uk
- Molly Garnier at artgal.co.uk
- Work by Molly Garnier at limetreegallery.com
- Work by Molly Garnier at stirlingart.com
- Lynn Painter-Stainers Prize at paintershall.co.uk