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'A Glasgow Affair' Imagined meeting at Kelvingrove between My Mexican Heroine and A Spanish Surrealist original painting Painting

John McDonald

United Kingdom

Painting, Acrylic on Canvas

Size: 36 W x 60 H x 1 D in

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About The Artwork

A Glasgow affair is a striking and unusual painting by Derbyshire based Scottish artist John McDonald. An imagined meeting of A Spanish Surrealist and My Mexican Heroine at Kelvingrove Art Gallery is the subject of John McDonald's homage to Scotland's most loved painting Christ of St John of the Cross. The artist himself played at Kelvingrove as a child, sliding along polished floors and eluding museum custodians.He attributes his decision to become an artist to his response to the Spanish surrealist's painting; as he writes in his artist's statement it 'planted the seed for a love of art' and 'awakened the soul of this deaf kid from Drumchapel'. A Glasgow Affair expresses the artist's own love affair with the city of Glasgow. Born in a Glasgow tenement in a time of division between Protestants and Catholics, this painting reflects his first striking impression of Catholicism, through Dali's painting. The painting poses questions about both art and religion, and is exhibited as part of a Pilgrimage of Art, a journey from Derbyshire to Glasgow, with a message about the power of creativity to heal divisions, open dialogue, and to make peace. A Glasgow Affair is a stunning large scale statement piece. The painting itself measures 3 x 5 ft (1 x 1.5 metres) and is beautifully presented in a wide gilt frame with art nouveau style moulding design. A Glasgow Affair is painted on 100% cotton stretched canvas, in artist's quality acrylic paints. It is varnished to protect from dust and light-fading, and comes ready to hang. John's paintings often have hidden symbols, or playful hidden meanings, and A Glasgow Affair is no exception. If you look closely at the Mexican Heroine's jewellery, you will see the brooch pendant is not the cameo, or Mexican Tehuana jewellery it seems to be, but is adorned with an exquisite little Scottish Thistle.

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Acrylic on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:36 W x 60 H x 1 D in

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Born in a Glasgow tenement in a sectarian district, I left school with a piece of paper (no certificates) saying that I was deaf and would be best employed in a noisy environment as everyone would be similarly disadvantaged. Born under the image of Christ of St John of the Cross by Salvador Dali. This huge painting in Kelvingrove art gallery seems to have an impact on me becoming an Artist in my 50s. Can I say that I spent years of my childhood evading gallery custodians and sliding along the polished floor under this painting? Unknown to me at the time, this painting by Dali, with its dynamic perspective and monumental scale, planted the seed for a love of art, and awakened the soul of this deaf kid from Drumchapel. When I first picked up a piece of charcoal as an adult and started to draw, it was a version of Dali's Christ of St John of the Cross which I created. Following a decade working in noisy environments, my real education began: in a Merseyside Unemployed Resource Centre. Training to become a Welfare Rights Officer I became hungry for education. In becoming mentally astute in the law, politics, and history that inform welfare and union work, I found, with naivety, myself. My fine art practice is informed by the dual and equal passions of my life: a passion for creative arts, and passionate campaigning for social justice. I have always been involved in the arts, through theatre, film, directing, and spoken word performance. For a long time I needed to shout, and I used performance to shout publically, about abuses and inequality I witnessed in mainstream services, to shout out for social justice, and educate on behalf of silent minorities. I am profoundly deaf and found that being involved in the arts was a way of being included. I started painting about 6 years ago on an old van that had been converted as a camper, just a plain white van that became a giant 3D canvas. I was conscious of passers by either watching or commenting, both were a challenge because of deafness but it was this situation that allowed me to be more included in my community and society in general. People liked my work and over a period of years as the van canvas was filled so was I, with confidence and more involvement with passers by, some who became friends. My painting is both the catalyst and the fruition of a personal journey towards peace.

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